Biotechnology Letters, Vol.33, No.10, 1955-1961, 2011
Inactivation of the extracytoplasmic function sigma factor Sig6 stimulates avermectin production in Streptomyces avermitilis
The role of the extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factor Sig6 (SAV663) in avermectin production by Streptomyces avermitilis was investigated by gene-deletion, complementation and over-expression experiments. Inactivation of Sig6 had no major effect on growth, stress responses, or morphology. Avermectin yield was increased 2- to 2.7-fold (similar to 680 mu g/ml) relative to the wild-type strain by deletion of the sig6 gene, and was restored to the wild-type level by introduction of a single copy of sig6. Introduction of extra multi-copy or integrative sig6 vectors into the wild-type decreased avermectin yield by 56-63%. Taken together, these findings indicate that Sig6 plays a negative regulatory role in avermectin production in S. avermitilis. RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that this role of Sig6 is mediated by the pathway-specific activator gene aveR.