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Title:
ENGINEERING OF HYDROCARBON METABOLISM IN YEAST
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2015/057155
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
The present invention relates to a genetically engineered yeasts, lacking, or having disrupted, the gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HDR1 ). Said yeast can produce hydrocarbons in a controllable and economic fashion. More specifically the invention relates to the production of liquid alkanes and alkenes that can be used for liquid transportation fuels, specialty chemicals, or feed stock for further chemical conversion.

Inventors:
NIELSEN JENS (SE)
SIEWERS VERENA (SE)
GONCALVES TEIXEIRA PAULO ALEXANDRE (SE)
ZHOU YONGJIN (SE)
BUIJS NICOLAAS A A (SE)
DAVID FLORIAN (SE)
Application Number:
PCT/SE2014/051229
Publication Date:
April 23, 2015
Filing Date:
October 17, 2014
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
BIOPETROLIA AB (SE)
International Classes:
C12P5/02; C12N1/18; C12N15/81; C12P7/04
Domestic Patent References:
WO2011062987A22011-05-26
WO2011127409A22011-10-13
Foreign References:
US20110201072A12011-08-18
US20130224818A12013-08-29
US20110201072A12011-08-18
Other References:
NAKAHARA K ET AL.: "The Sjogren-Larsson Syndrome Gene Encodes a Hexadecenal Dehydrogenase of the Sphingosine 1- Phosphate Degradation Pathway", MOLECULAR CELL, vol. 46, no. 4, 25 May 2012 (2012-05-25), pages 461 - 471, XP055266512, DOI: 10.1016/J.MOLCEL.2012.04.033
SCHIRMER A ET AL.: "Microbial Biosynthesis of Alkanes", SCIENCE, vol. 329, no. 5591, 30 July 2010 (2010-07-30), pages 559 - 562, XP002640301, DOI: 10.1126/SCIENCE.1187936
ZHANG F ET AL.: "Metabolic engineering of microbial pathways for advanced biofuels production", CURRENT OPINION IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, vol. 22, no. 6, 1 January 2011 (2011-01-01), pages 775 - 783, XP028397464, DOI: 10.1016/J.COPBIO.2011.04.024
IWAMA R ET AL.: "Identification and characterization of fatty aldehyde dehydrogenase genes involved in n-alkane metabolism of Yarrowia lipolytica", 26TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON YEAST GENETICS AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, IN YEAST, vol. 30, pages S229, XP008181784
NAKAHARA ET AL.: "The Sjogren-Larsson Syndrome Gene Encodes a Hexadecenal Dehydrogenase of the Sphingosine 1-Phosphate Degradation Pathway", MOLECULAR CELL, vol. 46, no. 4, 2012, pages 461 - 471, XP055266512, DOI: doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2012.04.033
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
AROS PATENT AB (Uppsala, SE)
Download PDF:
Claims:
Claims

1. A yeast, wherein

said yeast lacks a gene encoding hexadecanal dehydrogenase (HFD1) or comprises a disrupted gene encoding HFD1; and

said yeast comprises at least one heterologous gene encoding an enzyme involved in a pathway of producing hydrocarbons.

2. The yeast according to claim 1, wherein said yeast comprises at least one heterologous gene encoding an enzyme involved in a pathway of producing hydrocarbons from fatty acyl- Coenzyme A (CoA) through fatty aldehydes.

3. The yeast according to claim 1 or 2, comprising a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) reductase or a fatty acyl- Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) reductase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl594 or Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl.

4. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 3, comprising a heterologous gene encoding a fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl 593 or Nostoc puntiforme fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase.

5. The yeast according to claim 4, wherein said heterologous gene is a fusion gene encoding a fusion of said fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase and a catalase.

6. The yeast according to claim 4 or 5, further comprising:

a heterologous gene encoding cytosolic ferredoxin, preferably Escherichia coli fdx or Synechococcus elongates pefF; and

a heterologous gene encoding a cytosolic ferredoxin nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) reductase and/or a cytosolic ferredoxin NAD+ reductase, preferably E. coli fdr or S. elongates petH and/or an E. coli or S. elongates ferredoxin NAD+ reductase.

7. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 6, further comprising:

a heterologous gene encoding Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl ;

a heterologous gene encoding Musca domestica CYP4G2 deformylating oxygenase; and

a heterologous gene encoding M. domestica NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase.

8. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 7, further comprising a heterologous gene encoding Jeotgalicoccus spp Orf880.

9. The yeast according to claim 8, further comprising a heterologous gene encoding a chaperon selected from a group consisting of Escherichia coli GroEL and E. coli GroES.

10. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 9, further comprising:

Photorhabdus luminescens genes LuxC, LuxD and LuxE; and

a cyanobacterial fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl593 or Nostoc puntiforme fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase.

11. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 10, further comprising:

a heterologous gene encoding Mycobacterium marinum carboxylic acid reductase; a heterologous gene encoding Musca domestica CYP4G2 deformylating oxygenase; and

a heterologous gene encoding a phosphopantetheinyl transferase, preferably Aspergillus nidulans phosphopantetheinyl transferase.

12. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 11, further comprising:

a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acyl-Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) synthase, preferably Synechococcus elongates fatty acyl-ACP synthase;

a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acyl-ACP reductase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl594;

a heterologous gene encoding Musca domestica CYP4G2 decarbonylase; and a heterologous gene encoding M. domestica NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase.

13. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 12, further comprising:

a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acid reductase and a mitochondrial localization signal (MLS), preferably Mycobacterium marinum CAR fatty acid reductase and said MLS; a heterologous gene encoding a fatty aldehyde decarbonylase and said MLS, preferably Nostoc punctiforme fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase and said MLS; and

a heterologous gene encoding a phosphopantetheinyl transferase and said MLS, preferably Aspergillus nidulans phosphopantetheinyl transferase and said MLS.

14. The yeast according to claim 13, further comprising at least one gene encoding a respective enzyme involved in the yeast mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway selected from the group consisting of a yeast mitochondrial 2-enoyl thioester reductase and a yeast mitochondrial acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase, a yeast mitochondrial beta-keto- acyl synthase, a yeast mitochondrial 3-hydroxyacyl-Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) dehydratase, a yeast mitochondrial 3-oxoacyl-ACP reductase, and a yeast mitochondrial malonyl- CoA:ACP transferase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Saccharomyces cerevisiae HFA1, ETRL CEM1, HTD2, OAR1 and MCT1.

15. The yeast according to claim 13 or 14, further comprising a heterologous gene encoding a mitochondrial thoesterase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Acinetobacter baylyi TesA and Cocos nucifera FatBl.

16. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 15, further comprising a gene encoding a mitochondrial formate dehydrogenase, preferably an endogenous format dehydrogenase and a mitochondrial localization signal (MLS), more preferably Saccharomyces cerevisiae FDH1 and/or FDH2 and said MLS.

17. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 16, further comprising at least one heterologous gene encoding cytosolic enzyme selected from the group consisting of acetyl- Coenzyme A (CoA) C-acetyltransferase, a 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase, a 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase, an enoyl-CoA hydratase, a trans-enoyl-CoA reductase and a thioesterase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Saccharomyces cerevisiae FOX2, FOX3, ERG 10 and TES1 and bacterial yqeF, fadA, fabB and tdTER.

18. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 17, further comprising a heterologous gene encoding a thioesterase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Escherichia coli tesA, tesB, fadM and yciA.

19. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 18, wherein said yeast lacks or has reduced non-essential storage lipid formation, preferably by lacking one or more genes selected from the group consisting of any acyl-Coenzyme A (CoA)rsterol acyltransferase and any diacylgylcerol acyltransferase, more preferably by lacking one or more of Saccharomyces cerevisiae LROl, DGA1, ARE1 and ARE2, or comprising one or more disrupted genes selected from the group.

20. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 19, wherein said yeast lacks or has reduced non-essential beta-oxidation, preferably by lacking one or more genes selected from the group consisting of any peroxisomal fatty acyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) oxidase and any long chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase, more preferably by lacking one or more of Saccharomyces cerevisiae FAAl, FAA4 and POXl, or comprising one or more disrupted genes selected from the group.

21. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 20, further comprising genes adapted for overexpression enzymes involved in the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway selected from the group consisting of acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase and fatty acid synthase, preferably Saccharomyces cerevisiae ACC1, FAS1, FAS2 and ACB1.

22. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 21, further comprising heterologous genes adapted for overexpression enzymes involved in the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway selected from the group consisting of acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase and fatty acid synthase, preferably Rhodosporidium toruloides Rt ACCl, RtFASl and RtFASl.

23. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 22, wherein said yeast is characterized by supply of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) by:

comprising a heterologous gene encoding a non-phosphorylating NADP+-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, preferably Streptococcus mutans GAPN;

lacking an endogenous GDH1 gene encoding NAD-dependent glutamate

dehydrogenase, or comprising a disrupted GDH1 gene; and/or

comprising a GDH2 gene adapted for overexpression of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase.

24. The yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 23, wherein said yeast is selected from the group consisting of a Saccharomyces yeast, Hansenula polymorpha, a Kluyveromyces yeast, a Pichia yeast, a Candida yeast, a Trichoderma yeast and Yarrowia lipolytica, preferably Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

25. A method for producing hydrocarbons comprising:

culturing a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFDl) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFDl in culture conditions suitable for production of said hydrocarbons from said yeast; and

collecting said hydrocarbons from the culture medium in which said yeast is cultured and/or from said yeast.

26. The method according to claim 25, wherein culturing said yeast comprises culturing a yeast according to any of the claims 1 to 24 in said culture conditions suitable for production of said hydrocarbons from said yeast.

27. The method according to claim 25 or 26, wherein said hydrocarbons are a fatty acid derivative selected from a group consisting of an alkane, an alkene and a fatty alcohol, preferably selected from the group consisting of an alkane and an alkene.

28. Use of a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFDl) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFDl for the production of hydrocarbons.

29. The use according to claim 28, wherein said yeast is according to any of the claims 1 to 24.

30. The use according to claim 28 or 29, wherein said hydrocarbons are a fatty acid derivative selected from a group consisting of an alkane, an alkene and a fatty alcohol, preferably selected from the group consisting of an alkane and an alkene.

Description:
ENGINEERING OF HYDROCARBON METABOLISM IN YEAST

Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to the development of genetically engineered yeasts that can produce hydrocarbons in a controllable and economic fashion. More specifically the invention relates to the production of, for instance liquid alkanes and alkenes, that can be used for liquid transportation fuels, specialty chemicals, or feed stock for further chemical conversion.

Description of the Related Art

Increased petroleum prices along with concerns about carbon dioxide emission and the lack of sustainability of fossil fuels have been strongly motivating the development and production of biofuels. As about 80% of mineral oils are being used for liquid transportation fuels, there is particular focus on developing alternative biotech processes to replace these.

Currently, the dominating biofuel is ethanol. This is produced in very large quantities, particularly in Brazil from sugar cane and in the USA from corn, but there are also several key initiatives on establishing so-called second-generation bioethanol production, where cellulosic biomass is used as the feedstock. The production of advanced biofuels to be used as gasoline does not solve a major problem associated with ensuring provision of jetfuels and fuels for maritime and heavy duty road transportation, both of which require high-density fuels - generally known as diesel-fuels.

Currently, biodiesel is produced from vegetable oils, but this biodiesel production is problematic since it competes against use of these oils in the food sector. Furthermore, the yield of oil per hectare is very low compared with that of sugar cane or other sugar crops. This type of biodiesel consists mainly of fatty acid alkyl esters (FAAEs). Recently, initiatives have been started to produce FAAEs in microorganisms such as the bacterium Escherichia coli and the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae with sugars as substrate, which would allow for higher per hectare yields resulting in a lower environmental impact. A disadvantage of FAAEs is that they contain oxygen, which leads to a lower energy density compared to pure hydrocarbon molecules.

Summary of the invention

A primary object of the present invention is to provide a genetically engineered yeast that can produce hydrocarbons, including but not limited to alkanes and alkenes, in a controllable and economic fashion.

An aspect of the embodiments relates to a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecanal dehydrogenase (HFDl) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFDl . The yeast also comprises at least one heterologous gene encoding an enzyme involved in a pathway of producing hydrocarbons.

Another aspect of the embodiments relates to a method for producing hydrocarbons. The method comprises culturing a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFDl) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFDl in culture conditions suitable for production of the hydrocarbons from the yeast. The method also comprises collecting the hydrocarbons from the culture medium in which the yeast is cultured and/or from the yeast.

A further aspect of the embodiments relates to use of a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFDl) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFDl for the production of hydrocarbons.In one embodiment, Saccharomyces cerevisiae was metabolically engineered to synthesize medium-chain alkanes. The inventors identified and demonstrated the importance of eliminating hexadecenal dehydrogenase Hfdl in combination with heterologous expression of one or more enzymes, and/or biosynthetic and/or metabolic pathways, in enabling biosynthesis of the former compounds in yeast. The requirement of HFDl deletion further illustrates a key difference between yeast and bacteria, in which the main competing enzymes are fatty aldehyde reductases and fatty alcohol dehydrogenases that convert the fatty aldehyde intermediate reversibly into a fatty alcohol.

The fatty acid derivatives (e.g., alkanes, alkenes, fatty alcohols) produced by the recombinant yeast of this invention are liquid (e.g., carbon chains with 5-17 carbon atoms). Such liquid alkanes and/or alkenes can be used, for example, as liquid transportation fuels.

These and other aspects of the invention are set forth in more detail in the description of the invention below.

Brief description of the drawings

Figure 1 shows the alkane biosynthetic pathway and fatty aldehyde metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A heterologous alkane biosynthetic pathway, consisting of a S. elongatus fatty acyl-CoA/ACP reductase (SeFAR; encoded by orfl594) and a S. elongatus fatty aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (SeFADO; encoded by orfl593), was introduced in the yeast S. cerevisiae. This pathway intersects with endogenous metabolism of fatty aldehydes by promiscuous aldehyde reductase (ALR) and fatty alcohol dehydrogenases (ADH) and the hexadecenal dehydrogenase Hfdl (encoded by HFD1IYMR110C), which catalyzes the last step in the sphingolipid breakdown pathway. The E. coli ferredoxin (i¾Fdx)/ferredoxin reductase (£cFpr) system was introduced to provide the cofactor required for the FADO enzyme. The endogenous ferredoxin and ferredoxin reductase homologues Yahl and Arhl, respectively, are localized to the mitochondria.

Figure 2 shows analysis of alkane (A) and fatty alcohol production (B) in engineered S. cerevisiae strains. Strains carry either the WT allele or a deletion of the HFDl gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase and express 5 * . elongatus fatty acyl-CoA/ACP reductase (FAR), S. elongatus fatty aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (FADO), and/or E. coli ferredoxin/ferredoxin reductase (F/FNR). The error bars represent the standard deviation of three biological replicates.

Figure 3 shows alkane biosynthesis. Gas chromatograms of shake flask cultures incubated for 48 hours in glucose minimal medium. The lines represent S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C strains that express S. elongatus FAR and FADO as well as the E. coli reduction system consisting of Fdx (F) and Fpr (FNR). The S. cerevisiae strains carrying an empty vector pYX212 (black and brown traces) are shown as a control. A C7-C30 alkane analytical standard (purple trace) was used as a reference. The peaks highlighted by the blue bars labeled with I, II, IS, and III represent tridecane (CI 3), pentadecane (CI 5), hexadecane (CI 6; internal standard), and heptadecane (C17), respectively. The shown spectra are for the m/z values 184, 212, and 240. The mass spectra for the labeled peaks in comparison with a NIST library standard.

Figure 4 shows gas chromatography spectrum of intracellular alkanes and alkenes produced in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741 wt strain carrying the plasmids KB02 and pAlkaneO (WT S/S/F/F 2 I) and the strain BY4741 6550 (/z/diAstrain, S/S/F/F 4 III) carrying the same plasmids. The four dashed peaks represent the alkane standard that was analyzed under the same conditions; the peak at 17.6 minutes is a pentadecane peak. This spectrum illustrates the requirement of the HFDl deletion for fatty acid derivatives produced via a fatty aldehyde intermediate pathway.

Figure 5 shows gas chromatography spectrum of intracellular alkanes and alkenes produced in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741 6550 strain carrying the plasmids KB02 and pAlkaneO (S/S/F/F 1 III) and the control strain BY4741 6550 (hfdlA strain) carrying the empty plasmids pIYC04 and pSPGMl (control). The five dashed peaks represent the alkane standard that was analyzed under the same conditions; the peak at 17.6 and 20.1 minutes are a pentadecane and a heptadecane peak, the peak (4th) after 21 minutes represents the internal standard 1-octadecene. This spectrum illustrates that introduction of a cyanobacterial alka/ene biosynthesis pathway and deletion oiHFDl enables yeast to produce hydrocarbons.

Figure 6 describes direct repeat-mediated marker removal.

Figure 7 describes the pathway for the biosynthesis of free fatty acids in yeast cells from cytosolic acetyl-CoA that may result from overexpression of the specified bacterial or yeast genes in the cytosol of a yeast cell.

Figure 8 shows the change in produced fatty alcohol profile when a fatty-acid producing pathway composed of an acetyl-CoA C-acetyltransferase, a 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase, a 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase and enoyl-CoA hydratase multifunctional enzyme, a trans-enoyl-CoA reductase and a thioesterase is overexpressed in S. cerevisiae cytoplasm.

Figure 9 describes constructs for integration into S. cerevisiae strain CEN.PK 113- 11C for cytosolic overexpression of the medium-chain fatty acid biosynthesis pathway.

Figure 10 shows overexpression of Rhodosporidium toruloides ACC1, FAS1+FAS2, and ACC1+FAS1+FAS2 in a storage lipid free Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cells were cultivated and total lipids were measured as described by Khoomrung et al (2012).

Figure 11 shows an alkane sensor system, where ARE binding sites were fused to a minimal TEF promoter; by expressing the different components of the sensor system a dynamical range of 100-fold was achieved.

Figure 12 shows an overview of cytosolic and mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthesis and alkane, alkene, and fatty alcohol biosynthesis using fatty acid derivatives as substrate. Note: cytosolic acyl-CoA does not exist in this form during the fatty acid biosynthetic process but is released as such upon termination of it. Figure 13 shows the DNA pathway assembly constructs used to construct pAlkanel, pAlkane7, pAlkane8, and pFAR. Synechoccocus elongatus fatty acyl-ACP/CoA reductase (SeFar) and S. elongatus fatty aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (SeFad) were synthesized and codon-optimized. Escherichia coli ferredoxin (EcFdx) and E. coli ferredoxin NADP+ reductase (SeFpr) were amplified from E. coli DH5a. The promoter pTPI and the terminator tpYX212 are homologous to the respective promoter and terminator on the pYX212 plasmid. All four plasmids were constructed using the modular pathway engineering strategy (Zhou et al., 2012).

Figure 14 shows alkane biosynthesis. Gas chromatograms of shake flask cultures incubated for 48 hours in glucose minimal medium. The lines represent S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C strain carrying deletion of the HFDl gene and which express Photorhabdus luminescens LuxC, LuxD, and LuxE; and either a S. elongatus or a N. punctiforme FADO. The S. cerevisiae strains carrying an empty vector pYX212 (bottom trace) are shown as a control. A C7-C30 alkane analytical standard (top trace) was used as a reference. The peaks highlighted by the blue bars labeled with I, II, IS, and III represent tridecane (CI 3), pentadecane (CI 5), hexadecane (CI 6; internal standard), and heptadecane (CI 7), respectively. The shown spectra are for the m/z values 184, 212, and 240. The mass spectra for the labeled peaks in comparison with a NIST library standard.

Figure 15 shows the DNA pathway assembly constructs used to construct pAlkanel, pAlkane7, and pAlkane8. Synechoccocus elongatus fatty acyl-ACP/CoA reductase (SeFar) and S. elongatus fatty aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (SeFad) were synthesized and codon-optimized. Escherichia coli ferredoxin (EcFdx) and E. coli ferredoxin NADP+ reductase (SeFpr) were amplified from E. coli DH5a. The promoter pTPI and the terminator tpYX212 are homologous to the respective promoter and terminator on the pYX212 plasmid. All four plasmids were constructed using using the modular pathway engineering strategy (Zhou et al, 2012).

Detailed description of the invention

The present invention now will be described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings and examples, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. This description is not intended to be a detailed catalog of all the different ways in which the invention may be implemented, or all the features that may be added to the instant invention. For example, features illustrated with respect to one embodiment may be incorporated into other embodiments, and features illustrated with respect to a particular embodiment may be deleted from that embodiment. Thus, the invention contemplates that in some embodiments of the invention, any feature or combination of features set forth herein can be excluded or omitted. In addition, numerous variations and additions to the various embodiments suggested herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the instant disclosure, which do not depart from the instant invention. Hence, the following descriptions are intended to illustrate some particular embodiments of the invention, and not to exhaustively specify all permutations, combinations and variations thereof.

Unless otherwise defined, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. The terminology used in the description of the invention herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention.

All publications, patent applications, patents and other references cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entireties for the teachings relevant to the sentence and/or paragraph in which the reference is presented.

Unless the context indicates otherwise, it is specifically intended that the various features of the invention described herein can be used in any combination. Moreover, the present invention also contemplates that in some embodiments of the invention, any feature or combination of features set forth herein can be excluded or omitted. To illustrate, if the specification states that a composition comprises components A, B and C, it is specifically intended that any of A, B or C, or a combination thereof, can be omitted and disclaimed singularly or in any combination.

An alternative type of diesel fuel can include terpene derived hydrocarbons. Since terpene derived diesels need chemical finishing due to the unsaturated nature of the primary fermentation products, an ideal biofuel would comprise saturated alkanes, which are also the main component of petrodiesels. Biosynthetically they are derived from fatty acids, which are constructed from the building block acetyl-CoA.

Biosynthetic pathways leading to alkane formation have however only been elucidated very recently, mainly in plants and bacteria. The' l pathway" from cyanobacteria, is a two- step process, in which activated fatty acids are first reduced to fatty aldehydes and then decarbonylated to form alkanes. This pathway was transferred to E. coli and the resultant recombinant bacterium has been used in a fermentation process developed by a US-based company LS9. The present invention provides a further industrial organism, yeast, that produces fatty acid derivatives (e.g., alkanes, alkenes, fatty alcohols and the like). Using today's methods, production of such fatty acid derivatives has not been efficient in yeast, since the yields are too low and it has not been possible to obtain short/medium chain fatty acid derivatives. However, the present inventors surprisingly discovered that deleting a hexadecenal dehydrogenase gene, HFDl, in yeast led to the blocking of the conversion of fatty aldehyde to fatty acid, thereby resulting in the production of, for example, alkanes, alkenes and fatty alcohols. Due to its adaptability to fermentation conditions, such as low pH, yeast provides an ideal industrial microorganism for the production of these fatty acid derivatives.

The HDF1 gene in yeast has so far only been studied in the context of Sjogren-Larssons disease, but has never been associated with production of fatty acid derivatives as in the present invention. Hexadecenal dehydrogenase Hfdl (encoded by HFDl) competes for substrate with the heterologous fatty aldehyde decarbonylases leading to an ATP consuming futile cycle. By the discovery of the present inventors that a knock-out of this gene in yeast, alone or in combination with the integration of one or more heterologous nucleotide sequences and/or biosynthetic pathways, can alter the products of fatty acid biosynthesis and metabolism, the inventors have provided a solution to the utilization of different fatty acid biosynthetic machineries in the cytosol and in the mitochondria, respectively for the synthesis of medium and long chain fatty acids, and their subsequent conversion into alkanes, alkenes and/or fatty alcohols.

In the present invention, the inventors demonstrate fatty acid derived alkane biosynthesis in the yeast S. cerevisiae by expression of an alkane biosynthetic pathway consisting of a FAR, encoded by Synechoccocus elongatus orfl594, and a FADO, encoded by S. elongatus orfl593 (see Figure 1). However, upon first instance of expression of the SeFAR and SeFADO in a S. cerevisiae CEN.PK background, no alkanes could be detected (Figure 2 A, KB 16). The inventors suspected that an explanation for the absence of alkanes could be the lack of a compatible redox partner that is required by the FADO enzyme in the CEN.PK background strain. For the FADO enzyme it has been shown in vitro that it requires ferredoxin (F) and ferredoxin NADP+ reductase (FNR) to supply electrons. Yeast possesses the ferredoxin and the ferredoxin reductase homologs Yahl and Arhl, respectively, which both play a role in iron-sulfur cluster protein biosynthesis. Nonetheless, these proteins reside in the mitochondria, which makes them inaccessible as redox partners for the cytosolic alkane pathway. Since E. coli was able to support in vivo alkane production, we chose to co-express the E. coli ferredoxin (F) Fdx and ferredoxin NADP+ reductase (FNR) Fpr. The co- expression of the EcF/FNR reducing system resulted in the biosynthesis of 2.7 ± 0.9 mg/gDW heptadecane (Figure 2 A, KB 17) and no detection of pentadecane. This result is in contrast with the alkane profile that was found in E. coli as well as the fatty acid profile of S.

cerevisiae, in which C16 and CI 8 are the predominant fatty acid species. The inventors speculated that there might be a problem with supplying CI 6 fatty aldehydes for the decarbonylation reaction.

Hence, to ensure efficient functionality of the pathway the inventors chose to verify the fatty aldehyde supply by FAR. To confirm the supply of fatty aldehydes, fatty alcohol synthesis was used as an indicator. The detection of fatty alcohols as byproducts of alkane biosynthesis has been observed in E. coli, and is suspected to be a result of the activity of endogenous promiscuous aldehyde reductases and alcohol dehydrogenases. Yeast contains around 40 homologues of such reductases and dehydrogenases, and consequently fatty alcohol synthesis was expected to occur after the introduction of FAR. Nevertheless, when SeFAR was overexpressed in a wild-type yeast strain, it yielded only trace amounts of fatty alcohols (Figure 2B). These results indicated that there could be an additional (irreversible) reaction, not present in E. coli, which competes for the fatty aldehyde substrate. In the case of S. elongatus it has recently been shown that such an enzyme is present and that

overexpression of FAR results in fatty acid secretion due to the presence of the fatty aldehyde dehydrogenase AldE. This enzyme converts fatty aldehydes very efficiently into fatty acids. Alignment of AldE against the S. cerevisiae proteome yielded the hexadecenal dehydrogenase Hfdl as the primary candidate. To test the hypothesis that Hfdl prevents the biosynthesis of fatty alcohols by converting fatty aldehydes into fatty acids, HFD1 was knocked-out followed by SeFAR overexpression. Surprisingly, the deletion of HFD1 alone sufficed to enable fatty alcohol production (1.5 ± 0.1 mg/L, Figure 2B). The fatty aldehydes observed in this hfdl A strain most likely resulted from the sphingolipid breakdown pathway in which Hfdl catalyzes the final step. The additional overexpression of SeFAR increased the fatty alcohol titer to 1.8 ± 0.1 mg/L. The main fatty alcohol was hexadecanol (C16:0; 79%), followed by tetradecanol (C14:0; 11%), hexadecenol (C16:l; 7.3%), and dodecanol (C12:0; 2.8%). The drastic increase of C16 fatty alcohols illustrated that Hfdl catalyzed the oxidation of C16 fatty aldehydes toward the corresponding fatty acids.

The detection of heptadecane in the wild-type background strain KB 17 carrying SeFAR, SeFADO, and EcF/FNR and the absence of the fatty alcohol octadecanol in the hfdl A SeFAR strain suggests that Hfdl and the endogenous aldehyde reductases/alcohol dehydrogenases cannot use octadecanal as a substrate. This is in agreement with the detection of very long chain alkanes. The modest increase in fatty alcohol titer after FAR expression in a hfdlA strain, is most likely due to the low affinity of FAR for fatty acyl-CoA (it prefers fatty acyl-ACP). These results illustrate the importance of HFD1 deletion to enable fatty aldehyde supply.

Subsequently, the SeFADO and the EcF/FNR reducing system were introduced in the hfdlA strain, as deletion of HFD1 alone is sufficient to provide fatty aldehydes for the upstream part of the alkane pathway (which had been shown by the increased production of fatty alcohols). Subsequently, the alkane production increased drastically to 18.6 ± 1.4 mg/gDW in this hfdlA SeFADO EcF/FNR strain (Figure 2A, KB 18). Accumulation of tridecane and pentadecane was observed together with heptadecane, which was the sole product in the wild-type genetic background strain KB 17. The chain length profile of these alkanes is in agreement with those of the observed fatty alcohols. Additional expression of SeFAR in the hfdl strain resulted in a titer of 22.0 ± 1.4 mg/gDW. The slight increase in titer suggests again thatSeFAR has low catalytic efficiency on acyl-CoAs. No alkanes were detected extracellularly indicating that the alkanes are not excreted, which is in contrast with the detection of 80% of the produced alkanes in the extracellular medium in E. coli.

Similarly, we also realized medium-chain alkane production after HFD1 disruption in a S288C background. Interestingly, expression of only SeFAR and SeFADO in this strain resulted in pentadecane and heptadecane biosynthesis, possibly indicating the presence of a reducing system that is absent in the CEN.PK background strain.

In some embodiments of the invention, yeasts can be modified to overproduce acyl- CoA, fatty acids or acyl-ACPs in order to further increase the production of alkanes, alkenes and/or fatty alcohols. In one embodiment, increasing the fatty acid synthesis can be accomplished by overexpressing fatty acid biosynthetic genes, including but not limited to ACC1 (encoding acetyl-CoA carboxylase), FAS J (encoding the beta-subunit of fatty acid synthetase) and FAS2 (encoding the alpha-subunit of fatty acid synthetase). The inventors have in addition to these pathways also expressed several alternative alkane/alkene biosynthetic pathways in order to enable the biosynthesis of short, medium, and long chain alkanes, alkenes, and the like.

In some aspects of the invention, alkenes and/or alkanes with 5-17 carbon atoms are preferred. To achieve these chain lengths, the chain length of the fatty-acids used for conversion to alkanes and/or alkenes can be regulated. For example, shorter chain molecules can be obtained by introducing a fatty acid synthase from humans, by expression of the alkane/alkene pathways in the mitochondria, or by reversed beta-oxidation in the cytosol.

A still further aspect comprises eliminating non-essential pathways in the yeast that consume (activated) fatty acids and thus compete with the production of fatty acid derivatives. Such nonessential pathways can include but are not limited to elimination of storage lipid formation and peroxisomal beta-oxidation.

In an additional embodiment, the NADPH supply can be modified (e.g., increased) in the recombinant yeast. Since NADPH is an essential cofactor of fatty acid biosynthesis, by increasing the supply of NADPH, it may be possible to further increase the production of fatty acid derivatives according to this invention.

Hence, in one embodiment, the invention provides a genetically modified/non-native strain of yeast comprising a disrupted gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFD1).

In some aspects of the invention, the disruption of the HFD1 gene results in a gene that is inoperative or knocked out and/or a nonfunctional gene product (e.g., a polypeptide having no activity as compared to the activity of the Hfdl wild type polypeptide). In other embodiments, the disruption of the HFD1 gene results in a gene product that has reduced activity (e.g., 0 to 20% of the activity of the HFD1 wild type polypeptide). In still other embodiments, the disruption of the HFD1 gene results in reduced expression of a gene product as compared to the Hfdl wild type polypeptide.

As used herein the terms a ype polypepH Di geneed herein the terms a ype polypepH Z ) / " are used interchangeably.

A "disrupted gene" as defined herein involves any mutation or modification to a gene resulting in a partial or fully non-functional gene and gene product. Such a mutation or modification includes, but is not limited to, a missense mutation, a nonsense mutation, a deletion, a substitution, an insertion, and the like. Furthermore, a disruption of a gene can be achieved also, or alternatively, by mutation or modification of control elements controlling the transcription of the gene, such as mutation or modification in a promoter and/or enhancement elements. In such a case, such a mutation or modification results in partially or fully loss of transcription of the gene, i.e. a lower or reduced transcription as compared to native and non-modified control elements. As a result a reduced, if any, amount of the gene product will be available following transcription and translation.

The objective of gene disruption is to reduce the available amount of the gene product, including fully preventing any production of the gene product, or to express a gene product that lacks or having lower enzymatic activity as compared to the native or wild type gene product.

A yeast useful with this invention can be any yeast useful in industrial and fermentation practices. In one embodiment, the yeast can be from the genus Saccharomyces. In other embodiments, the yeast is Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

In some embodiments, the genetically modified yeast strain of this invention (e.g., comprising at least a disrupted HDF1 gene) can further comprise one or more additional genetic modifications to improve production of desired products. Such modifications can include, but are not limited to:

(1) introduction of new enzymes, and/or biosynthetic and/or metabolic pathways, including, but not limited to expression of an alkane biosynthetic pathway consisting of Synechoccous elongatus FAR and Synechoccous elongatus FADO and;

(2) optionally, ferrodoxin (F) and ferrodoxin NADP+ reductase (FNR) may be introduced to supply electrons.

In still some embodiments, the yeast strains of the invention can additionally comprise genetic modifications that eliminate or reduce non-essential pathways. Such modifications can eliminate or reduce the utilization or consumption of fatty acids by enzymes or pathways that compete with the production of fatty acid derivatives such as alkanes, alkenes and fatty alcohols in the recombinant yeast strains. Exemplary embodiments of such non-essential pathways can include but are not limited to storage lipid formation and beta-oxidation. In particular embodiments, storage lipid formation can be eliminated or reduced by disrupting the genes encoding, for example, acyl-CoA:sterol acyltransferase (ARE1, ARE2) , diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAl, LROl). In other embodiments, beta-oxidation and free fatty acid activation can be eliminated or reduced by disrupting the genes encoding, for example, POX1, FAA1, FAA4.

In additional aspects of the invention, the genetically modified yeast of the invention can be further modified to express heterologous fatty acid biosynthetic polypeptides for increased production of fatty acids. Nonlimiting examples of genes encoding such heterologous polypeptides Accl, Fasl and Fas2 (from e.g., Rhodosporidium toruloides).

NADPH is a cofactor in the synthesis of fatty acids. To increase the availability of NADPH for fatty acid biosynthesis, the genetically modified yeast of the invention can be further modified for heterologous expression of non-phosphorylating NADP+-dependent glyceraldehydes-3 -phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPN) (from e.g., Streptococcus mutans). In other aspects, the yeast can be modified to disrupt GDH1 encoding NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase. In still other embodiments, the yeast of the invention can be further modified to overexpress GDH2 encoding NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase.

In additional embodiments, the yeast of the invention (e.g., comprising at least a disrupted HDF1 gene) can be further modified to comprise genetic modifications to increase production of fatty acid derivatives having particular chain lengths (e.g., short, medium, long chain fatty acid derivatives). In one aspect, the yeast can be modified to express a chimeric cytosolic pathway for the production of medium chain fatty acids or an increased ratio of medium-chain to long-chain fatty acids. Thus, for example, the yeast can be modified to (over)express in the cytosol FOX2, FOX3, ERG 10 and TES1 (derived from, for example, S. cerevisiae), and/or yqeF, fadA, fabB and tdTER (from bacteria).

Fatty acid chain length can also be regulated through modification of expression of thioesterases. Thus, in some embodiments, the yeast of this invention can be further modified to express a thiesterase having a desired chain length specificity (e.g., tesA, tesB, fadM, yciA from, e.g. E. coli).

In particular embodiments, the genetically modified yeast of the invention can be further modified to produce short chain fatty acid derivatives (e.g., alkanes, alkenes, fatty alcohols and the like). Non-limiting examples of genes useful for such modifications include fpr and fdx from, for example, E.coli; and/or ferredoxin (orf_1499, petF) and ferredoxin- NADPH reductase (orf_0978, petH) from Synechococcus elongatus. Accordingly, in some embodiments, a genetically modified yeast of this invention can further comprise nucleic acid constructs comprising nucleotide sequences and/or fdx and/or nucleotide sequences encoding petF and/or petH.

In additional embodiments, the yeast strains of this invention (e.g., comprising at least a disrupted HFDl gene) can further comprise nucleic acid constructs comprising nucleotide sequences encoding enzymes and/or biosynthetic pathways for conversion of fatty acids to alkanes and/or alkenes. Thus in some embodiments, the genetically modified yeast of the invention can be further modified to express Mycobacterium marinum carboxylic acid reductase and Musca domestica CYP4G2 decarbonylase (decarbonylase is also referred to as deformylating oxygenase in the art). In a representative embodiment, the yeast can be further modified to express a thioesterase, or an additional thioesterase, to relieve fatty acid biosynthess repression by acyl-CoA and to increase substrate availability for alkane and alkene biosynthesis. In other embodiments, the yeast strains of the invention can be modified to comprise expression of Synechococcus elongatus orfl594 and ACS, Musca domestica CYP4GT decarbonylase and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. In further embodiments, the yeast strains of the invention can be modified to express Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl , Musca domestica CYP4GT decarbonylase and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase.

In further aspects of the invention, the bacterial luminescence pathway and a cyanobacterial fatty aldehyde decarbonylase can be expressed in the yeast strains of the invention in order to utilize fatty acyl-CoA in the synthesis of alkanes and alkenes. Thus, in a representative embodiment, the yeast strains of the invention comprising at least a disrupted HFD1 gene further comprises LuxC, LuxD and LwcE from Photorhabdus luminescens and Nostoc punctiforme FAD.

In other embodiments, the yeast strains of the invention can be further modified to comprise a pathway for conversion of fatty acids to terminal alkenes. A nonlimiting example of such a pathway includes Jeotgalicoccus spp οτβ80, Escherichia coli GroEL and

Escherichia coli GroES.

The genetically modified yeast strain can additionally comprise carboxylic acid reductase (from e.g., Mycobacterium marinum) and decarbonylase (from e.g., Musca domestica) for conversion of fatty acids to alkanes and alkenes.

In some embodiments, short chain alkanes and alkenes are the desired product.

Accordingly, in some embodiments, the genetically modified yeast of the invention can comprise modifications to their mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway. In a representative embodiment, the genetically modified yeast of the invention can be modified to express in their mitochondria the Mycobacterium marinum CAR fatty acid reductase, the Nostoc puntiforme fatty aldehyde decarbonylase and Aspergillus nidulans

phosphopantetheinyl transferase NpgA, optionally, the yeast can be modified to additionally overexpress components of the yeast mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway, including but not limited to Etrl (2-enoyl thioester reductase) and Hfal (acetyl-CoA carboxylase). In some embodiments, the yeast mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway components to be overexpressed can further comprise CEM1, HTD2, OAR1, and MCT1. In further

embodiments, the yeast comprising modifications to their mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway can additionally comprise fdx and fpr from E. coli, wherein the respective protein sequences comprise mitochondrial localization signal(s) to direct them to the mitochondria. In still further embodiments, the yeast comprising modifications to their mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway can additionally comprise nucleic acids encoding thioesterase to be expressed in the mitochondria. Non-limiting examples of thiesterases with activity towards medium chain fatty acyl-ACP include Acinetobacter baylyi TesA, Cocos nucifera FatBl, or homologue thioesterases thereof. In additional embodiments, the yeast of the invention can be further modified to express a formate dehydrogenase enzyme in the mitochondria. Non-limiting examples of formate dehydrogenase enzymes include Fdhl and/or Fdh2, which can be introduced into the yeast with mitochondrial localization signals.

In some embodiments the genetically modified yeast of the invention can be modified to have improved fatty aldehyde decarbonylase activity (thereby improving alkane and/or alkene production) by fusing a catalase to a fatty aldehyde decarbonylase (e.g.,

Synechoccocus elongatus orfl593 ox Nostoc punctiforme FAD).

In other embodiments, the genetically modified yeast strains of the invention can comprise Yarrowia lipoytica YasS repressor and a fluorescent protein expressed from an alkane response element, ARE1 containing promoter in order to be able to screen genetically modified yeast strains, including, but not limited to, the yeast strains described in this invention, for modified alkane production (e.g., increased and/or reduced as compared to a control yeast strain not comprising said modification(s)). Thus, in some embodiments, a method of screening for modified production of alkanes comprises, introducing into a yeast strain of interest a Yarrowia lipoytica Yas3 repressor, the activators Yasl and Yas2 and a fluorescent protein expressed from an alkane response element, ARE1, containing promoter, and detecting modified production of alkanes.

The present invention provides a further method of screening for modified production of alkanes and/or alkenes (e.g., increased and/or reduced as compared to a control yeast strain not comprising said modification(s)) based on the toxicity of fatty acid accumulation in yeast strains that are modified to have reduced or no storage lipid formation and/or beta-oxidation. Thus, the consumption of fatty acids by the introduced alkane biosynthetic pathways can be evaluated by monitoring the toxicity of the genetically modified yeast strains.

The present invention further provides methods for the production of hydrocarbons in genetically modified yeast, comprising culturing a genetically modified yeast of this invention and collecting the hydrocarbons. In some embodiments, a hydrocarbon can be a fatty acid derivative, for example, an alkane, an alkene, or a fatty alcohol.

Definitions

As used in the description of the invention and the appended claims, the singular forms "a," "an" and "the" are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. Also as used herein, "and/or" refers to and encompasses any and all possible combinations of one or more of the associated listed items, as well as the lack of

combinations when interpreted in the alternative ("or").

The term "about," as used herein when referring to a measurable value such as a dosage or time period and the like, is meant to encompass variations of ± 20%, + 10%, ± 5%, ± 1%, ± 0.5%, or even ± 0.1% of the specified amount.

As used herein, phrases such as "between X and Y" and "between about X and Y" should be interpreted to include X and Y. As used herein, phrases such as "between about X and Y" mean "between about X and about Y" and phrases such as "from about X to Y" mean "from about X to about Y."

The term "comprise," "comprises" and "comprising" as used herein, specify the presence of the stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.

As used herein, the transitional phrase "consisting essentially of means that the scope of a claim is to be interpreted to encompass the specified materials or steps recited in the claim and those that do not materially affect the basic and novel characteristic(s) of the claimed invention. Thus, the term "consisting essentially of when used in a claim of this invention is not intended to be interpreted to be equivalent to "comprising."

As used herein, the terms "increase," "increases," "increased," "increasing," and similar terms indicate an elevation of at least about 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%, 150%, 200%, 300%, 400%, 500% or more.

As used herein, the terms "reduce," "reduces," "reduced," "reduction," and similar terms mean a decrease of at least about 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 35%, 50%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 97% or more. In particular embodiments, the reduction results in no or essentially no (i.e. , an insignificant amount, e.g. , less than about 10% or even 5%) detectable activity or amount.

As used herein, the terms "express," "expresses," "expressed" or "expression," and the like, with respect to a nucleic acid molecule and/or a nucleotide sequence (e.g. , RNA or DNA) indicates that the nucleic acid molecule and/or a nucleotide sequence is transcribed and, optionally, translated. Thus, a nucleic acid molecule and/or a nucleotide sequence may express a polypeptide of interest or a functional untranslated RNA. A "functional" RNA includes any untranslated RNA that has a biological function in a cell, e.g., regulation of gene expression. Such functional RNAs include but are not limited to RNAi (e.g. , siRNA, shRNA), miRNA, antisense RNA, anti-microRNA antisense oligodeoxyribonucleotide (AMO; see e.g., Lu et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 37(3):e24;: 10.1093/nar/gkn 1053), ribozymes, RNA aptamers and the like.

As used herein, "overexpress," "overexpressed," "overexpression" and the like, in reference to a polynucleotide means that the expression level of said polynucleotide is greater than that for the same polynucleotide in its native or wild type genetic context (e.g., in the same position in the genome and/or associated with the native/endogenous regulatory sequences). A nucleotide sequence can be overexpressed by inserting it into an

overexpression vector. Such vectors are known in the art.

A "heterologous" or a "recombinant" nucleotide sequence is a nucleotide sequence not naturally associated with a host cell into which it is introduced, including non- naturally occurring multiple copies of a naturally occurring nucleotide sequence. A heterologous gene may optionally be codon optimized for expression in yeast according to techniques well known in the art and as further described herein. A heterologous gene also encompasses, in some embodiments, an endogenous gene controlled by a heterologous promoter and/or control elements to achieve an expression of the gene that is different from, typically higher, i.e. so-called overexpression, than normal or baseline expression of the gene in a yeast comprising the endogenous gene under control of wild type (endogenous) promoter and control elements.

A "native" or "wild type" nucleic acid, nucleotide sequence, polypeptide or amino acid sequence refers to a naturally occurring or endogenous nucleic acid, nucleotide sequence, polypeptide or amino acid sequence. Thus, for example, a "wild type mRNA" is an mRNA that is naturally occurring in or endogenous to the organism. A "homologous" nucleic acid sequence is a nucleotide sequence naturally associated with a host cell into which it is introduced.

Also as used herein, the terms "nucleic acid," "nucleic acid molecule," "nucleotide sequence" and "polynucleotide" refer to RNA or DNA that is linear or branched, single or double stranded, or a hybrid thereof. The term also encompasses RNA/DNA hybrids. When dsRNA is produced synthetically, less common bases, such as inosine, 5-methylcytosine, 6- methyladenine, hypoxanthine and others can also be used for antisense, dsRNA, and ribozyme pairing. For example, polynucleotides that contain C-5 propyne analogues of uridine and cytidine have been shown to bind RNA with high affinity and to be potent antisense inhibitors of gene expression. Other modifications, such as modification to the phosphodiester backbone, or the 2'-hydroxy in the ribose sugar group of the RNA can also be made.

As used herein, the term "nucleotide sequence" refers to a heteropolymer of nucleotides or the sequence of these nucleotides from the 5' to 3' end of a nucleic acid molecule and includes DNA or RNA molecules, including cDNA, a DNA fragment or portion, genomic DNA, synthetic (e.g., chemically synthesized) DNA, plasmid DNA, mRNA, and anti-sense RNA, any of which can be single stranded or double stranded. The terms "nucleotide sequence" "nucleic acid," "nucleic acid molecule," "oligonucleotide" and "polynucleotide" are also used interchangeably herein to refer to a heteropolymer of nucleotides. Nucleic acid molecules and/or nucleotide sequences provided herein are presented herein in the 5' to 3 ' direction, from left to right and are represented using the standard code for representing the nucleotide characters as set forth in the U.S. sequence rules, 37 CFR §§1.821 - 1.825 and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WO) Standard ST.25.

As used herein, the term "gene" refers to a nucleic acid molecule capable of being used to produce mRNA, antisense RNA, miRNA, anti-microRNA antisense

oligodeoxyribonucleotide (AMO) and the like. Genes may or may not be capable of being used to produce a functional protein or gene product. Genes can include both coding and non- coding regions (e.g., introns, regulatory elements, promoters, enhancers, termination sequences and/or 5' and 3' untranslated regions). A gene may be "isolated" by which is meant a nucleic acid that is substantially or essentially free from components normally found in association with the nucleic acid in its natural state. Such components include other cellular material, culture medium from recombinant production, and/or various chemicals used in chemically synthesizing the nucleic acid.

"Introducing" in the context of a yeast cell means contacting a nucleic acid molecule with the cell in such a manner that the nucleic acid molecule gains access to the interior of the cell. Accordingly, polynucleotides and/or nucleic acid molecules can be introduced yeast cells in a single transformation event, in separate transformation events. Thus, the term

"transformation" as used herein refers to the introduction of a heterologous nucleic acid into a cell. Transformation of a yeast cell can be stable or transient.

"Transient transformation" in the context of a polynucleotide means that a

polynucleotide is introduced into the cell and does not integrate into the genome of the cell.

By "stably introducing" or "stably introduced" in the context of a polynucleotide introduced into a cell, it is intended that the introduced polynucleotide is stably incorporated into the genome of the cell, and thus the cell is stably transformed with the polynucleotide. "Stable transformation" or "stably transformed" as used herein means that a nucleic acid molecule is introduced into a cell and integrates into the genome of the cell. As such, the integrated nucleic acid molecule is capable of being inherited by the progeny thereof, more particularly, by the progeny of multiple successive generations. "Genome" as used herein includes the nuclear genome. Stable transformation as used herein can also refer to a nucleic acid molecule that is maintained extrachromasomally, for example, as a minichromosome.

Transient transformation may be detected by, for example, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) or Western blot, which can detect the presence of a peptide or polypeptide encoded by one or more nucleic acid molecules introduced into an organism. Stable transformation of a cell can be detected by, for example, a Southern blot hybridization assay of genomic DNA of the cell with nucleic acid sequences which specifically hybridize with a nucleotide sequence of a nucleic acid molecule introduced into an organism (e.g., a yeast). Stable transformation of a cell can be detected by, for example, a Northern blot hybridization assay of RNA of the cell with nucleic acid sequences which specifically hybridize with a nucleotide sequence of a nucleic acid molecule introduced into a yeast or other organism. Stable transformation of a cell can also be detected by, e.g., a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or other amplification reaction as are well known in the art, employing specific primer sequences that hybridize with target sequence(s) of a nucleic acid molecule, resulting in amplification of the target sequence(s), which can be detected according to standard methods Transformation can also be detected by direct sequencing and/or hybridization protocols well known in the art.

The terms "complementary" or "complementarity," as used herein, refer to the natural binding of polynucleotides under permissive salt and temperature conditions by base-pairing. For example, the sequence "A-G-T" binds to the complementary sequence "T-C-A." Complementarity between two single-stranded molecules may be "partial," in which only some of the nucleotides bind, or it may be complete when total complementarity exists between the single stranded molecules. The degree of complementarity between nucleic acid strands has significant effects on the efficiency and strength of hybridization between nucleic acid strands.

A "portion" or "fragment" of a nucleotide sequence of the invention will be understood to mean a nucleotide sequence of reduced length relative to a reference nucleic acid or nucleotide sequence and comprising, consisting essentially of and/or consisting of a nucleotide sequence of contiguous nucleotides identical or almost identical (e.g., 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 98%, 99% identical) to the reference nucleic acid or nucleotide sequence. Such a nucleic acid fragment or portion according to the invention may be, where appropriate, included in a larger polynucleotide of which it is a constituent.

Different nucleic acids or proteins having homology are referred to herein as

"homologues." The term homologue includes homologous sequences from the same and other species and orthologous sequences from the same and other species. "Homology" refers to the level of similarity between two or more nucleic acid and/or amino acid sequences in terms of percent of positional identity (i.e., sequence similarity or identity). Homology also refers to the concept of similar functional properties among different nucleic acids or proteins. Thus, the compositions and methods of the invention further comprise homologues to the nucleotide sequences and polypeptide sequences of this invention. "Orthologous," as used herein, refers to homologous nucleotide sequences and/ or amino acid sequences in different species that arose from a common ancestral gene during speciation. A homologue of a nucleotide sequence of this invention has a substantial sequence identity (e.g., at least about 70%, 75%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, and/or 100%) to said nucleotide sequence.

As used herein "sequence identity" refers to the extent to which two optimally aligned polynucleotide or peptide sequences are invariant throughout a window of alignment of components, e.g., nucleotides or amino acids. "Identity" can be readily calculated by known methods including, but not limited to, those described in: Computational Molecular Biology (Lesk, A. M., ed.) Oxford University Press, New York (1988); Biocomputing: Informatics and Genome Projects (Smith, D. W., ed.) Academic Press, New York (1993); Computer Analysis of Sequence Data, Part I (Griffin, A. M., and Griffin, H. G., eds.) Humana Press, New Jersey (1994); Sequence Analysis in Molecular Biology (von Heinje, G., ed.) Academic Press (1987); and Sequence Analysis Primer (Gribskov, M. and Devereux, J., eds.) Stockton Press, New York (1991).

As used herein, the term "percent sequence identity" or "percent identity" refers to the percentage of identical nucleotides in a linear polynucleotide sequence of a reference

("query") polynucleotide molecule (or its complementary strand) as compared to a test ("subject") polynucleotide molecule (or its complementary strand) when the two sequences are optimally aligned. In some embodiments, "percent identity" can refer to the percentage of identical amino acids in an amino acid sequence.

As used herein, the phrase "substantially identical," in the context of two nucleic acid molecules, nucleotide sequences or protein sequences, refers to two or more sequences or subsequences that have at least about 70%, least about 75%, at least about 80%, least about 85%, at least about 90%, at least about 95%, at least about 96%, at least about 97%, at least about 98%, or at least about 99% nucleotide or amino acid residue identity, when compared and aligned for maximum correspondence, as measured using one of the following sequence comparison algorithms or by visual inspection. In some embodiments of the invention, the substantial identity exists over a region of the sequences that is at least about 50 residues to about 150 residues in length. Thus, in some embodiments of the invention, the substantial identity exists over a region of the sequences that is at least about 16, at least about 18, at least about 22, at least about 25, at least about 30, at least about 40, at least about 50, about 60, about 70, about 80, about 90, about 100, about 110, about 120, about 130, about 140, about 150, or more residues in length, and any range therein. In representative embodiments, the sequences can be substantially identical over at least about 22 nucleotides. In still other embodiments, the substantial identiy exists over the full length or nearly the full length of the sequence.

For sequence comparison, typically one sequence acts as a reference sequence to which test sequences are compared. When using a sequence comparison algorithm, test and reference sequences are entered into a computer, subsequence coordinates are designated if necessary, and sequence algorithm program parameters are designated. The sequence comparison algorithm then calculates the percent sequence identity for the test sequence(s) relative to the reference sequence, based on the designated program parameters.

Optimal alignment of sequences for aligning a comparison window are well known to those skilled in the art and may be conducted by tools such as the local homology algorithm of Smith and Waterman, the homology alignment algorithm of Needleman and Wunsch, the search for similarity method of Pearson and Lipman, and optionally by computerized implementations of these algorithms such as GAP, BESTFIT, FASTA, and TFASTA available as part of the GCG® Wisconsin Package® (Accelrys Inc., San Diego, CA). An "identity fraction" for aligned segments of a test sequence and a reference sequence is the number of identical components which are shared by the two aligned sequences divided by the total number of components in the reference sequence segment, i. e. , the entire reference sequence or a smaller defined part of the reference sequence. Percent sequence identity is represented as the identity fraction multiplied by 100. The comparison of one or more polynucleotide sequences may be to a full-length polynucleotide sequence or a portion thereof, or to a longer polynucleotide sequence. For purposes of this invention "percent identity" may also be determined using BLASTX version 2.0 for translated nucleotide sequences and BLASTN version 2.0 for polynucleotide sequences.

Software for performing BLAST analyses is publicly available through the National Center for Biotechnology Information. This algorithm involves first identifying high scoring sequence pairs (HSPs) by identifying short words of length W in the query sequence, which either match or satisfy some positive-valued threshold score T when aligned with a word of the same length in a database sequence. T is referred to as the neighborhood word score threshold. These initial neighborhood word hits act as seeds for initiating searches to find longer HSPs containing them. The word hits are then extended in both directions along each sequence for as far as the cumulative alignment score can be increased. Cumulative scores are calculated using, for nucleotide sequences, the parameters M (reward score for a pair of matching residues; always > 0) and N (penalty score for mismatching residues; always < 0). For amino acid sequences, a scoring matrix is used to calculate the cumulative score.

Extension of the word hits in each direction are halted when the cumulative alignment score falls off by the quantity X from its maximum achieved value, the cumulative score goes to zero or below due to the accumulation of one or more negative-scoring residue alignments, or the end of either sequence is reached. The BLAST algorithm parameters W, T, and X determine the sensitivity and speed of the alignment. The BLASTN program (for nucleotide sequences) uses as defaults a wordlength (W) of 11, an expectation (E) of 10, a cutoff of 100, M=5, N=-4, and a comparison of both strands. For amino acid sequences, the BLASTP program uses as defaults a wordlength (W) of 3, an expectation (E) of 10, and the

BLOSUM62 scoring matrix (see Henikoff & Henikoff, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89: 10915 (1989)).

In addition to calculating percent sequence identity, the BLAST algorithm also performs a statistical analysis of the similarity between two sequences (see, e.g., Karlin & Altschul, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 90: 5873-5787 (1993)). One measure of similarity provided by the BLAST algorithm is the smallest sum probability (P(N)), which provides an indication of the probability by which a match between two nucleotide or amino acid sequences would occur by chance. For example, a test nucleic acid sequence is considered similar to a reference sequence if the smallest sum probability in a comparison of the test nucleotide sequence to the reference nucleotide sequence is less than about 0.1 to less than about 0.001. Thus, in some embodiments of the invention, the smallest sum probability in a comparison of the test nucleotide sequence to the reference nucleotide sequence is less than about 0.001. Two nucleotide sequences can also be considered to be substantially identical when the two sequences hybridize to each other under stringent conditions. In some representative embodiments, two nucleotide sequences considered to be substantially identical hybridize to each other under highly stringent conditions.

"Stringent hybridization conditions" and "stringent hybridization wash conditions" in the context of nucleic acid hybridization experiments such as Southern and Northern hybridizations are sequence dependent, and are different under different environmental parameters. An extensive guide to the hybridization of nucleic acids is found in Tijssen Laboratory Techniques in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology-Hybridization with Nucleic Acid Probes part I chapter 2 "Overview of principles of hybridization and the strategy of nucleic acid probe assays" Elsevier, New York (1993). Generally, highly stringent hybridization and wash conditions are selected to be about 5°C lower than the thermal melting point (T m ) for the specific sequence at a defined ionic strength and pH.

The Tm is the temperature (under defined ionic strength and pH) at which 50% of the target sequence hybridizes to a perfectly matched probe. Very stringent conditions are selected to be equal to the T m for a particular probe. An example of stringent hybridization conditions for hybridization of complementary nucleotide sequences which have more than 100 complementary residues on a filter in a Southern or northern blot is 50% formamide with 1 mg of heparin at 42°C, with the hybridization being carried out overnight. An example of highly stringent wash conditions is 0.1 5M NaCl at 72°C for about 15 minutes. An example of stringent wash conditions is a 0.2x SSC wash at 65°C for 15 minutes (see, Sambrook, infra, for a description of SSC buffer). Often, a high stringency wash is preceded by a low stringency wash to remove background probe signal. An example of a medium stringency wash for a duplex of, e.g., more than 100 nucleotides, is lx SSC at 45°C for 15 minutes. An example of a low stringency wash for a duplex of, e.g., more than 100 nucleotides, is 4-6x SSC at 40°C for 15 minutes. For short probes (e.g., about 10 to 50 nucleotides), stringent conditions typically involve salt concentrations of less than about 1.0 M Na ion, typically about 0.01 to 1.0 M Na ion concentration (or other salts) at pH 7.0 to 8.3, and the temperature is typically at least about 30°C. Stringent conditions can also be achieved with the addition of destabilizing agents such as formamide. In general, a signal to noise ratio of 2x (or higher) than that observed for an unrelated probe in the particular hybridization assay indicates detection of a specific hybridization. Nucleotide sequences that do not hybridize to each other under stringent conditions are still substantially identical if the proteins that they encode are substantially identical. This can occur, for example, when a copy of a nucleotide sequence is created using the maximum codon degeneracy permitted by the genetic code.

The following are examples of sets of hybridization/wash conditions that may be used to clone homologous nucleotide sequences that are substantially identical to reference nucleotide sequences of the invention. In one embodiment, a reference nucleotide sequence hybridizes to the "test" nucleotide sequence in 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 0.5 M NaP0 4 , 1 mM EDTA at 50°C with washing in 2X SSC, 0.1% SDS at 50°C. In another embodiment, the reference nucleotide sequence hybridizes to the "test" nucleotide sequence in 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 0.5 M NaP0 4 , 1 mM EDTA at 50°C with washing in IX SSC, 0.1% SDS at 50°C or in 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 0.5 M NaP0 4 , 1 mM EDTA at 50°C with washing in 0.5X SSC, 0.1% SDS at 50°C. In still further embodiments, the reference nucleotide sequence hybridizes to the "test" nucleotide sequence in 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 0.5 M NaP0 4 , 1 mM EDTA at 50°C with washing in 0.1X SSC, 0.1% SDS at 50°C, or in 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 0.5 M NaP0 4 , 1 mM EDTA at 50°C with washing in 0.1X SSC, 0.1% SDS at 65°C.

In particular embodiments, a further indication that two nucleotide sequences or two polypeptide sequences are substantially identical can be that the protein encoded by the first nucleic acid is immunologically cross reactive with, or specifically binds to, the protein encoded by the second nucleic acid. Thus, in some embodiments, a polypeptide can be substantially identical to a second polypeptide, for example, where the two polypeptides differ only by conservative substitutions.

In some embodiments, the recombinant nucleic acids molecules, nucleotide sequences and polypeptides of the invention are "isolated." An "isolated" nucleic acid molecule, an "isolated" nucleotide sequence or an "isolated" polypeptide is a nucleic acid molecule, nucleotide sequence or polypeptide that, by the hand of man, exists apart from its native environment and is therefore not a product of nature. An isolated nucleic acid molecule, nucleotide sequence or polypeptide may exist in a purified form that is at least partially separated from at least some of the other components of the naturally occurring organism or virus, for example, the cell or viral structural components or other polypeptides or nucleic acids commonly found associated with the polynucleotide. In representative embodiments, the isolated nucleic acid molecule, the isolated nucleotide sequence and/or the isolated polypeptide is at least about 1%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, or more pure. In other embodiments, an isolated nucleic acid molecule, nucleotide sequence or polypeptide may exist in a non-native environment such as, for example, a recombinant host cell. Thus, for example, with respect to nucleotide sequences, the term "isolated" means that it is separated from the chromosome and/or cell in which it naturally occurs. A polynucleotide is also isolated if it is separated from the chromosome and/or cell in which it naturally occurs in and is then inserted into a genetic context, a chromosome and/or a cell in which it does not naturally occur (e.g., a different host cell, different regulatory sequences, and/or different position in the genome than as found in nature). Accordingly, the recombinant nucleic acid molecules, nucleotide sequences and their encoded polypeptides are "isolated" in that, by the hand of man, they exist apart from their native environment and therefore are not products of nature, however, in some embodiments, they can be introduced into and exist in a

recombinant host cell.

In some embodiments, the nucleotide sequences and/or recombinant nucleic acid molecules of the invention can be operatively associated with a variety of promoters for expression in yeast cells. Thus, in representative embodiments, a recombinant nucleic acid of this invention can further comprise one or more promoters operably linked to one or more nucleotide sequences.

By "operably linked" or "operably associated" as used herein, it is meant that the indicated elements are functionally related to each other, and are also generally physically related. . Thus, the term "operably linked" or "operably associated" as used herein, refers to nucleotide sequences on a single nucleic acid molecule that are functionally associated. Thus, a first nucleotide sequence that is operably linked to a second nucleotide sequence, means a situation when the first nucleotide sequence is placed in a functional relationship with the second nucleotide sequence. For instance, a promoter is operably associated with a nucleotide sequence if the promoter effects the transcription or expression of said nucleotide sequence. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the control sequences (e.g., promoter) need not be contiguous with the nucleotide sequence to which it is operably associated, as long as the control sequences function to direct the expression thereof. Thus, for example, intervening untranslated, yet transcribed, sequences can be present between a promoter and a nucleotide sequence, and the promoter can still be considered "operably linked" to the nucleotide sequence.

A "promoter" is a nucleotide sequence that controls or regulates the transcription of a nucleotide sequence (i.e. , a coding sequence) that is operably associated with the promoter. The coding sequence may encode a polypeptide and/or a functional RNA. Typically, a "promoter" refers to a nucleotide sequence that contains a binding site for RNA polymerase II and directs the initiation of transcription. In general, promoters are found 5', or upstream, relative to the start of the coding region of the corresponding coding sequence. The promoter region may comprise other elements that act as regulators of gene expression. These include a TATA box consensus sequence, and often a CAAT box consensus sequence (Breathnach and Chambon, (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50:349).

Promoters can include, for example, constitutive, inducible, temporally regulated, developmentally regulated, chemically regulated, tissue-preferred and/or tissue-specific promoters for use in the preparation of recombinant nucleic acid molecules, i.e., "chimeric genes" or "chimeric polynucleotides." In particular aspects, a "promoter" useful with the invention is a promoter capable of initiating transcription of a nucleotide sequence in a yeast cell.

The choice of promoter will vary depending on the temporal and spatial requirements for expression, and also depending on the host cell to be transformed. Promoters useful with the invention include, but are not limited to, those that drive expression of a nucleotide sequence constitutively, those that drive expression when induced, and those that drive expression in a tissue- or developmentally-specific manner. These various types of promoters are known in the art.

As used herein the terms "fatty acid derivative" or "fatty acid derivatives" includes but are not limited to hydrocarbons, such as for example alkanes and/or alkenes as well as fatty alcohols, of any length (e.g., short, medium and long chain).

Hexadecenal dehydrogenase gene HFD1 is found in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and encodes hexadecenal dehydrogenase Hfdl . HFD1 homologues can be found in other yeasts and are also envisioned to be part of this invention even though the gene name may not be the same.

Acyl-CoA or fatty acyl-CoA is a group of molecules involved in the metabolism of fatty acids. It is a transient intermediate compound formed when coenzyme A (CoA) attaches to the end of a fatty acid inside living cells.

ACP (acyl carrier protein) is a protein that covalently binds fatty acyl intermediates via a phosphopantetheine linker during the synthesis process.

Fatty acid derivatives (e.g., alkanes, alkenes and/or fatty alcohols, and the like) may be produced in yeasts by conversion of acyl coenzyme A (acyl-CoA), fatty acids, or fatty acyl- ACP. Several pathways may be used to get the yeasts to produce acyl-CoA, fatty acids, fatty acyl-ACP. However the production of the fatty acid derivatives from acyl-CoA, fatty acids and/or fatty acyl-ACP via fatty aldehydes will only be possible to a substantial extend if HDF1 is deleted.

An aspect of the embodiments relates to a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecanal dehydrogenase (HFD1) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFD1. The yeast also comprises at least one heterologous gene encoding an enzyme involved in a pathway of producing hydrocarbons.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises at least one heterologous gene encoding an enzyme involved in a pathway of producing hydrocarbons from fatty acyl-CoA through fatty aldehydes.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acyl-CoA reductase or a fatty acyl-Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) reductase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl594 or Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding a fatty aldehyde- deformylating oxygenase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl593 or Nostoc p ntiforme fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase.

In a particular embodiment, the heterologous gene is a fusion gene encoding a fusion of said fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase and a catalase.

In a particular embodiment the yeast further comprises a heterologous gene encoding cytosolic ferredoxin, preferably Escherichia coli fdx or Synechococcus elongates petF, and a heterologous gene encoding a cytosolic ferredoxin nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) reductase and/or a cytosolic ferredoxin NAD+ reductase, preferably E. coli fdr or S. elongates petH and/or an E. coli or S. elongates ferredoxin NAD+ reductase.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl, a heterologous gene encoding Musca domestica CYP4G2 deformylating oxygenase, and a heterologous gene encoding M. domestica NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding Jeotgalicoccus spp Orf880.

In a particular embodiment, the yeast further comprises a heterologous gene encoding a chaperon selected from a group consisting of Escherichia coli GroEL and E. coli GroES.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises Photorhabdus luminescens genes LuxC, LuxD and LuxE, and a cyanobacterial fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase, preferably

Synechococcus elongates orfl593 or Nostoc puntiforme fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase. In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding Mycobacterium marinum carboxylic acid reductase, a heterologous gene encoding Musca domestica CYP4G2 deformylating oxygenase, and a heterologous gene encoding a phosphopantetheinyl transferase, preferably Aspergillus nidulans phosphopantetheinyl transferase.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acyl-Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) synthase, preferably Synechococcus elongates fatty acyl-ACP synthase, a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acyl-ACP reductase, preferably Synechococcus elongates orfl594, a heterologous gene encoding Musca domestica CYP4G2 decarbonylase, and a heterologous gene encoding M. domestica NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding a fatty acid reductase and a mitochondrial localization signal (MLS), preferably Mycobacterium marinum CAR fatty acid reductase and the MLS, a heterologous gene encoding a fatty aldehyde decarbonylase and the MLS, preferably Nostoc punctiforme fatty aldehyde-deformylating oxygenase and the MLS, and a heterologous gene encoding a phosphopantetheinyl transferase and the MLS, preferably Aspergillus nidulans phosphopantetheinyl transferase and the MLS.

In a particular embodiment, the yeast further comprises at least one gene encoding a respective enzyme involved in the yeast mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic pathway selected from the group consisting of a yeast mitochondrial 2-enoyl thioester reductase and a yeast mitochondrial acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase, a yeast mitochondrial beta-keto- acyl synthase, a yeast mitochondrial 3-hydroxyacyl-Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) dehydratase, a yeast mitochondrial 3-oxoacyl-ACP reductase, and a yeast mitochondrial malonyl- CoA:ACP transferase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Saccharomyces cerevisiae HFA1, ETR1, CEM1, HTD2, OAR1 and MCT1.

In a particular embodiment, the yeast further comprises a heterologous gene encoding a mitochondrial thoesterase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Acinetobacter baylyi TesA and Cocos nucifera FatB 1.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a gene encoding a mitochondrial formate dehydrogenase, preferably an endogenous format dehydrogenase and a mitochondrial localization signal (MLS), more preferably Saccharomyces cerevisiae FDH1 and/or FDH2 and the MLS.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises at least one heterologous gene encoding cytosolic enzyme selected from the group consisting of acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) C- acetyltransferase, a 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase, a 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase, an enoyl- CoA hydratase, a trans-enoyl-CoA reductase and a thioesterase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Saccharomyces cerevisiae FOX2, FOX3, ERG10 and TESl and bacterial yqeF, fadA, fabB and tdTER.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises a heterologous gene encoding a thioesterase, preferably selected from the group consisting of Escherichia coli tesA, tesB, fadM and yciA.

In an embodiment the yeast lacks or has reduced non-essential storage lipid formation, preferably by lacking one or more genes selected from the group consisting of any acyl- Coenzyme A (CoA):sterol acyltransferase and any diacylgylcerol acyltransferase, more preferably by lacking one or more of Saccharomyces cerevisiae LROl, DGA1, ARE1 and ARE2, or comprising one or more disrupted genes selected from the group.

In an embodiment, the yeast lacks or has reduced non-essential beta oxidation, preferably by lacking one or more genes selected from the group consisting of any peroxisomal fatty acyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) oxidase and any long chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase, more preferably by lacking one or more of Saccharomyces cerevisiae FAA1, FAA4 and POX1, or comprising one or more disrupted genes selected from the group.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises genes adapted for overexpression enzymes involved in the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway selected from the group consisting of acetyl- Coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase and fatty acid synthase, preferably Saccharomyces cerevisiae ACC1, FAS1, FAS2 and ACB1.

In an embodiment, the yeast comprises heterologous genes adapted for overexpression enzymes involved in the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway selected from the group consisting of acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase and fatty acid synthase, preferably Rhodospohdium toruloides RtACCl, R FAS1 and Rft AS2.

In an embodiment, the yeast is characterized by supply of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) by:

comprising a heterologous gene encoding a non-phosphorylating NADP+-dependent glyceraldehyde-3 -phosphate dehydrogenase, preferably Streptococcus mutans GAPN;

lacking an endogenous GDH1 gene encoding NAD-dependent glutamate

dehydrogenase, or comprising a disrupted GDH1 gene; and/or

comprising a GDH2 gene adapted for overexpression of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase.

In an embodiment, the yeast is selected from the group consisting of a Saccharomyces yeast, Hansenula polymorpha, a Kluyveromyces yeast, a Pichia yeast, a Candida yeast, a Trichoderma yeast and Yarrowia Hpolytica, preferably Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 014 051229

Another aspect of the embodiments relates to a method for producing hydrocarbons. The method comprises culturing a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFD1) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFD1 in culture conditions suitable for production of the hydrocarbons from the yeast. The method also comprises collecting the hydrocarbons from the culture medium in which the yeast is cultured and/or from the yeast.

In an embodiment, culturing the yeast comprises culturing a yeast according to any of the embodiments in the culture conditions suitable for production of the hydrocarbons from the yeast.

In an embodiment, the hydrocarbons are a fatty acid derivative selected from a group consisting of an alkane, an alkene and a fatty alcohol, preferably selected from the group consisting of an alkane and an alkene.

A further aspect of the embodiments relates to use of a yeast lacking a gene encoding hexadecenal dehydrogenase (HFD1) or comprising a disrupted gene encoding HFD1 for the production of hydrocarbons.

In an embodiment, the yeast is according to any of the embodiments.

In an embodiment, the hydrocarbons are a fatty acid derivative selected from a group consisting of an alkane, an alkene and a fatty alcohol, preferably selected from the group consisting of an alkane and an alkene.

The invention will now be described with reference to the following examples. It should be appreciated that these examples are not intended to limit the scope of the claims to the invention, but are rather intended to be exemplary of certain embodiments. Any variations in the exemplified methods that occur to the skilled artisan are intended to fall within the scope of the invention.

Examples

EXAMPLE 1

Expression of an alkane biosynthetic pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdlA

The purpose of this example is to illustrate the importance of HFD1 deletion in yeast to enable, for example, alkane, alkene and fatty alcohol biosynthesis via a two-step pathway involving a fatty aldehyde as intermediate. As a proof of principal, a commercially available knock-out strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741 6550 (MATa his3Al leu2A0 metl5A0 uraSAO hfdlA) was transformed with the plasmids pAlkaneO and pKB02 carrying the Synechococcus elongatus fatty acyl-CoA/ACP reductase gene orfl594 and fatty aldehyde decarbonylase gene orfl 593, and Escherichia coli DH5 ferredoxin gene fax and ferredoxin reductase gene fpr. A control strain harboring two empty plasmids and a wild-type BY4741 (MATa his3Al leu2A0 met] 5 O ura3A0) strain (harboring the same plasmids as the producer strain) were constructed simultaneously.

The genes orfl594 (NT ID 1, codon-optimized for yeast) and orfl593 (NT ID 2, idem) coding for the two-step cyanobacterial alkane biosynthetic pathway described by Schirmer et al (2010) were ordered codon-optimized for yeast from GenScript (Piscataway, NJ, USA). Orfl594 was flanked by the restriction sites Ba RllHindlll, and orfl593 by NotllSacl. The genes were cloned into pSPGMl (Chen et al, 2012) by restriction, ligation, and amplification in Escherichia coli DH5a resulting in plasmid pAlkaneO. The Escherichia coli DH5 fdx (NT ID 8) was cloned from a single colony by PCR using the primers PR ID 158 and PR ID 159. These primers contained the restriction site NotllSacl. The gene fpr (NT ID 9), flanked by the restriction sites BamRll Xhol, was cut from the plasmid pISP08 (Partow et al, 2012). Both genes were cloned into pIYC04 (Chen et al, 2013) by restriction, ligation, and amplification in Escherichia coli DH5a resulting in plasmid KB02. Both plasmids were verified by restriction analysis and sequencing of each gene (PR ID 187-190). After verification, both plasmids were co-transformed into chemical competent yeast cells (Gietz et al, 2002).

Four independent clones were isolated for both the producer and control strain by streak purification onto fresh SD -His -Ura 2% glucose plates. Successful transformation of the producer was verified by colony PCR (using primers PR ID 150-151, 154-155, and 158- 161). Each clone was grown overnight in a 5 ml YPD (yeast peptone dextrose) pre-culture and inoculated the next day at 0.2 OD in 25 ml 2% glucose synthetic medium (dropout uracil and histidine) in 250 ml shake flasks. The cultures were incubated at 30 °C and 200 rpm. After 48 h, cell pellets were collected by centrifugation 5 minutes at 1000 rcf, washed twice with 5 ml phosphate buffer (10 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.5). Extraction of lipids and alkanes was carried out as described by Khoomrung et al (2013), with the exception that the final sample was dissolved in hexane (instead of chloroform/methanol). Subsequently, 2μ1 injections were analyzed using a gas chromatograph (Focus GC, ThermoScientific) mass spectrometer (DSQII ThermoScientific) equipped with a ZB-5MS Guardian (L=30 m, ID 0.25 mm, df = 0.25 μιη, Phenomenex) column. The inlet temperature was set to 250 °C, the helium (carrier) gas flow to 1 ml/min splitless. The initial oven temperature was set to 50 °C and held for 5 minutes, then the temperature was ramped to 310 °C by 10 °C/min and held for 6 minutes. The mass transfer line temperature was set to 300 °C, the ion source temperature was set to 230 °C and a full scan for m/z of 50 to 650 was performed. A gas chromatogram spectrum of one independent clone of the producing strain, one control, and a standard run is shown in Figure 5. In Figure 4 another spectrum is shown for another independent clone of the producing strain, one wild-type strain harboring the pathway, and a standard run. These figures illustrate that HFDl is required to enable alkane production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

EXAMPLE 2

Deletion of hexadecenal dehydrogenase HFDl in Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113- 11C

The purpose of this example is to show how HFDl was deleted in Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C which is a commercially available strain. The yeast

Saccharomyces cerevisiae possesses hexadecenal dehydrogenase Hfdl, an enzyme which will compete for substrate with the heterologous fatty aldehyde decarbonylases and leads to an ATP consuming futile cycle. In cyanobacteria, it has been shown that deletion of a similar gene led to fatty aldehyde accumulation. Saccharomyces cerevisiae HFDl was deleted using the strategy depicted in Figure 6. Using two primer pairs (PR ID 122-125) up and

downstream fragments of HFDl were cloned, and using primer pair PR ID 127-128

Kluyveromyces lactis URA3 was cloned from plasmid pWJ1042 (Reid et al., 2002).

Subsequently all three fragments were fused using primer pair (PR ID 122 and 125) as described Zhou et al., 2012. The deletion cassette was transformed into Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C {MATa MAL2-8c SUC2 hisSAl ura 3-52) by electroporation at 1.5 kV, 10μΡ, and 200 Ω in a 0.2 cm gap electroporation cuvette using Bio-Rad MicroPulser electroporation apparatus (Bio-Rad Laboratories AB, Sweden) and selected on URA drop out plates for integration. Transformants were verified by colony PCR and the KIURA3 marker was subsequently looped out using flanking direct repeats as illustrated in Figure 6.

Successful clones were selected by growth on 5-FOA and URA dropout plates.

EXAMPLE 3

Expression of Escherichia coli ferredoxin and Escherichia coli ferredoxin:NADPH reductase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

It has been shown that cyanobacterial fatty aldehyde decarbonylases require an electron transfer system and that Escherichia coli ferredoxin and ferredoxin:NADPH reductase can be used as such.The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains ferredoxin and ferredoxin:NADPH reductase homologues (Yahl and Arhl, respectively), but they are localized to the mitochondria and can therefore most likely not be used by the cytosolic expressed fatty aldehyde decarbonylase. The Escherichia coli DH5a fdx (NT ID 8) was cloned from a single colony by PCR using the primers PR ID 212 and PR ID 213. The gene fpr (NT ID 9), was cloned from the plasmid pISP08 (Partow et al, 2012) by PCR using the primers PR ID 214 and PR ID 215. To enable alka/ene biosynthesis, this plasmid carries a fatty acid reductase and fatty aldehyde decarbonylase homologous (as described in Example 1; cloned using primers PR ID 208-211). Combinations of these genes were introduced into pYX212 by using a modular pathway engineering strategy as described before (Zhou et al., 2012), resulting in the plasmids pAlkanel, pAlkane 7, pAlkane 8, and pFAR see Figure 13. Plasmids were extracted from single yeast colonies using the Zymoprep Yeast Plasmid Miniprep II kit (Nordic Biolabs, Taby, Sweden) and transformed into E. coli DH5a competent cells. After purification of the plasmid, verification by restriction analysis, and sequencing, the plasmids were transformed into Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C and

Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdl . Yeast competent cells were prepared and transformed with 1 g of plasmid according to the lithium acetate/single-stranded carrier DN A/poly ethylene glycol method (Gietz and Woods, 2002) and successful transformants were selected on URA dropout plates.

Shake flask batch fermentations were carried out in minimal medium containing 30 g/1 glucose (Verduyn et al., 1992). Cultures were inoculated, from overnight precultures, at 0.1 OD in 25 ml minimal medium supplemented with histidine (40 mg/1; Sigma Aldrich) in 250 ml shake flasks. The shake flasks were incubated at 30 °C and 200 rpm orbital shaking. After 48 hours the cells were harvested by centrifugation (5 minutes; 1000 g) and washed once with 5 ml phosphate buffer (10 mM H2P04, pH 7.5). The supernatant was removed, the pellet frozen in liquid nitrogen and freeze dried (Christ Alpha 2-4 LSC, Martin Christ

Gefriertrocknungsanlagen GmbH, Osterode am Harz, Germany) for 48 hours.Alkanes were extracted from the freeze dried cell pellets as described before (Khoomrung et al., 2013), with the exceptions that the extracted fraction was dissolved in hexane (alkanes) and that hexadecane (alkanes) was used as an internal standard. Samples were analyzed by gas chromatography (FocusGC, ThermoFisher Scientific) coupled to mass spectrometry (DSQII, ThermoFisher Scientific) using a Zebron ZB-5MS Guardian capillary GC column (30 m χ 0.25 mm χ 0.25 μιη, Phenomenex, Vasrlose, Denmark). The GC-MS conditions are described in Example 1. Analytical standards for alkanes (Sigma Aldrich) were analyzed during the same run for peak identification and quantification. The alkane production levels as observed for the wild-type and hfdlA strains carrying the plasmid pAlkanel (KB 17 and KB 19), pAlkane 7 (KB 18), or pAlkane 8 (KB 16) is shown in Figure 2A. This figure illustrates that expression of a ferredoxin/ferredoxin reductase reducing system is required to enable alkane production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK. The gas chromatogram spectra of

Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C and Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdl expressing the plasmid pAlkane 1, pAlkane7, or pAlkane8 are further shown in Figure 3.

EXAMPLE 4

Expression of Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 ferredoxin and Synechococcus elongatus ferredoxin:NADPH reductase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Recently the endogenous Synechococcus elongatus electron transfer system was identified and shown to be more efficient in vitro than the heterologous system. The

Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 ferredoxin (orf_1499, petF, P ID 6) and ferredoxin- NADPH reductase (orf_0978, petH, P ID 7) genes are codon optimized for expression in yeast. Subsequently they are cloned similar to the E coli homologues, as described in example 3, and cotransformed with fatty aldehyde decarbonylase homologue carrying plasmid as described in example 1.

EXAMPLE 5

Conversion of fatty acyl-CoA to alka/enes by expression of Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl and Musca domestica CYP4G2 decarbonylase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdlA

The purpose of this example is to illustrate the possibility of expression of a fatty acyl- CoA preferring fatty acid reductase in combination with a P450 type decarbonylase. Thus this pathway will convert fatty acyl-CoA to alkanes and alkenes via the intermediates fatty acyl- CoA and fatty aldehydes.

The plasmid pAlkane3 was constructed similar to the method described in example 8. For expression in yeast codon optimized genes encoding Acinetobacter baylyi Acrl (NT ID 22), Musca domestica CYP4G2 (NT ID 14), and Musca domestica NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (NT ID 15) were cloned using primers with to the gene homologous regions (PR ID 201-202, 196-197, 192-193). The pathway was subsequently assembled as described in Shao et al, 2009 and Zhou et al, 2012.

Cells were cultivated and analyzed as described in example 1.

EXAMPLE 6 Conversion of fatty acids to terminal alkenes by expression of Jeotgalicoccus spp orf880, Escherichia coli GroEL and Escherichia coli GroES in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

The purpose of this example is to illustrate the improvement of conversion efficiency of the decarboxylation pathway by expression of chaperones. This will improve the folding of Jeotgalicoccus spp Orf880p. Overexpression of GroEL and GroES is done e.g. according to Guadelupe-Medina et al, 2013 on a HIS marker plasmid (e.g. pIYC04).

The gene Jeotgalicoccus spp Orf880 (NT ID 4, codon-optimized for yeast) coding for the one-step cyanobacterial alkane biosynthetic pathway was ordered codon-optimized for yeast from GenScript (Piscataway, NJ, USA). The gene was flanked by the restriction sites NotllSacl and it was cloned into pSP-GMl (Chen et al, 2012) by restriction, ligation, and amplification in Escherichia coli DH5a. The resulting plasmid OleT was verified by restriction analysis and sequencing (PR ID 188-189). After verification, the plasmids were cotransformed into chemical competent yeast cells (Gietz et al, 2002).

Cells are cultivated and analyzed as described in example 1.

EXAMPLE 7

Conversion of acyl-CoA to alka/enes by expression of Escherichia coli TesA ', Photorhabdus luminescens LuxC, LuxD, and LuxE, and Nostoc punctiforme FAD in Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdlA

This invention demonstrates the utilization of fatty acyl-CoA for the synthesis of alkanes and alkenes (see Figure 14) using (part of) the bacterial luminescence pathway and a cyanobacterial fatty aldehyde decarbonylase. The expression of a thioesterase might relieve the inhibitory effect of fatty acyl-CoA on fatty acid synthesis and will provide the substrate of the enzymes LuxC, LuxD, and LuxE.

The Photorhabdus luminescens genes encoding LuxC (P ID 3), LuxD (P ID 4), and LuxE (P ID 5) were codon-optimized for expression in yeast, and cloned using primers PR ID 212-217. A pathway consisting of these three genes, a Synechoccous elongatus (NT ID 2, cloned using primers PR ID 220-221) or a Nostoc punctiforme FAD gene (NT ID 3, cloned using primers PR ID 218-219), and Escherichia coli truncated thioesterase TesA (NT ID 56, cloned using primers PR ID) is assembled on a plasmid pAlkane8 and pAlkane5 similar to the method described in examples 3. The transformation of the plasmids into CEN.PK113-11C hfdlA was carried out according to Gietz et al, 2002. Cells were cultivated and analyzed as described in example 1. The gas chromatogram spectra as observed for the hfdl strain carrying the plasmid pAlkane5 (carrying the Nostoc punctiforme FAD) or pAlkane9 (carrying the Synechoccous elongatus FAD) are shown in Figure 15. This figure illustrates that expression of a bacterial luminescence pathway and a cyanobacterial fatty aldehyde decarbonylase enables alkane production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK.

EXAMPLE 8

Conversion of fatty acids to alka/enes by expression of Mycobacterium marinum carboxylic acid reductase and Musca domestica CYP4G2 decarbonylase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdlA

In this invention the Mycobacterium marinum carboxylic acid reductase (NT ID 7) was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.P l 13-11C hfdlA to convert fatty acids to fatty aldehydes. The Musca domestica CYP4G2 P450 decarbonylase (NT ID 14) enzyme was also expressed to subsequently convert these fatty aldehydes into alka/enes. The plasmid pAlkane4 was constructed by cloning the for yeast codon optimized genes encoding

Mycobacterium marinum CAR (NT ID 14), Musca domestica CYP4G2 (NT ID 14), Musca domestica NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (NT ID 15), and the Aspergillus nidulans phosphopantetheinyl transferase NpgA (NT ID 5) with overlap primers (PR IDl 14-115, 112- 113, 192-193 and 108-109, respectively). The pathway was subsequently assembled as described in Shao et al, 2009 and Zhou et al, 2012. Cells were cultivated and analyzed as described in example 1. In addition to these four enzymes, an additional thioesterase is expressed to relieve fatty acid biosynthesis repression by acyl-CoA and to increase substrate availability for this pathway.

EXAMPLE 9

Conversion of fatty acids to alka/enes by expression of Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 ACS, Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 orfl594 and Musca domestica CYP4G2 decarbonylase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdlA

The purpose of this example is to illustrate the possibility of expression of a fatty acyl- ACP synthase to provide more of the preferred substrate acyl-ACP for the fatty acyl-ACP reductase, and the combination of a P450 type decarbonylase and cyanobacterial reductase. Thus this pathway will convert fatty acids to alkanes and alkenes via the intermediates fatty acyl-ACP and fatty aldehydes. The plasmid pAlkane2 was constructed similar to the method described in example 8. For expression in yeast codon optimized genes encoding Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 orfl594 (NT ID 1), Musca domestica CYP4G2 (NT ID 14), Musca domestica NADPH- cytochrome P450 reductase (NT ID 15), and Synechococcus elongatus ACS (NT ID 6?) were cloned using primers with to the gene homologous regions (PR ID 194-195, 196-197, 192- 193, 110-111 , respectively). The pathway was subsequently assembled as described in Shao et al, 2009 and Zhou et al, 2012.

Cells were cultivated and analyzed as described in example 1. In addition to these four genes, an additional thioesterase with preference for acyl-CoA over acyl-ACP is expressed to increase the levels of free fatty acids.

EXAMPLE 10

Fusing ofNostoc punctiforme fatty aldehyde decarbonylase to catalase and expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae hfdlA for improved fatty aldehyde to alka/ene conversion

The purpose of this invention is to improve the catalytic activity of the fatty aldehyde decarbonylase, which can be the Synechoccocus elongatus PCC7942 orfl593 (NT ID 2) or the Nostoc punctiforme FAD (NT ID 3), or a homologue.

The fatty aldehyde decarbonylase can be fused to a catalase as has been shown by Andre et al (2013). This will improve the activity of this enzyme and thus the alka/ene formation. The proposed mechanism is that the toxic byproduct hydrogen peroxide is broken down by the catalase, thereby avoiding that it can inhibit the decarbonylase. The novelty would be to express such a fusion enzyme in yeast together with HFD1 deletion. A heterologously expressed fatty acid reductase, as described in, for example, example 8, and the endogenous fatty acid synthesis via the breakdown of spingholipids, can supply the fatty aldehydes for the decarbonylase-catalase fusion enzyme.

EXAMPLE 11

Expression of alkane or alkene biosynthetic pathway in the mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

The purpose of this example is to illustrate the utilization of the mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthetic machinery for the synthesis of short chain fatty acids, and its subsequent conversion into short chain alkanes and alkenes.

In this experiment the Mycobacterium marinum CAR (NT ID 7) fatty acid reductase and the Nostoc puntiforme (NT ID 3) fatty aldehyde decarbonylase encoding genes were expressed in the mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C. All enzymes not localized by default into the mitochondria were directed there by attaching a

mitochondrial localization signal (Hurt et al, 1985) to the front of each gene. In addition to the alkane bio synthetic pathway, the genes encoding key components of the mitochondrial fatty acid machinery Etrl (2-enoyl thioester reductase) and Hfal (acetyl-CoA carboxylase) were overexpressed to ensure sufficient precursor supply for the alkane pathway.

The plasmid pAlkane6 was constructed similar to the method described in example 5, 8 and 9. For expression in yeast codon optimized genes encoding Mycobacterium marinum CAR (NT ID 14, attached MLS), Nostoc punctiforme FAD (NT ID 3, attached MLS), Aspergillus nidulans phosphopantetheinyl transferase NpgA (NT ID 5, attached MLS), Saccharomyces cerevisiae Hfal (NT ID 61), and Saccharomyces cerevisiae Etrl (NT ID 60) were cloned using primers with to the gene homologous regions (PR ID 165-178, respectively, HFA1 was split up in three parts due to its length). The pathway was subsequently assembled as described in Shao et al, 2009 and Zhou et al, 2012.

Escherichia colifdx (NT ID 8) and fpr (NT ID 9) were cloned from Escherichia coli DH5 genomic DNA, a mitochondrial localization signal (Hurt et al, 1985) was included in the forward primers in front of each gene, and the resulting gene fragments were ligated into the plasmid pIYC04 (Chen et al, 2012). The resulting plasmid, KB03, was verified by sequencing using primers PR ID 187-190. Subsequently the pAlkane6 and pKB03 plasmids were transformed into Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-11C by chemical

transformation (Gietz et al, 2002) and successful transformants were selected on HIS dropout plates. To enable alka/ene biosynthesis, this plasmid can be co-transformed with a plasmid carrying fatty acid reductase and fatty aldehyde decarbonylase homologous and auxiliary enzymes.

Precursor supply can possibly be enhanced by removing post translational modification sites in Etrl (K301) and Hfal (1157S), and by further overexpression of the remaining fatty acid biosynthetic enzymes (e.g. Ceml, Htd2, Oarl, and Mctl).

Expression of a thioesterase is required to provide sufficient precursors to the mitochondrial alkane pathway since there is no known yeast mitochondrial thioesterase with activity towards medium chain fatty acyl-ACP. Acinetobacter baylyi TesA (P ID 2), Cocos nucifera FatBl (P ID 1), or homologue thioesterases have been shown to have preference for C8 - C14 fatty acyl-ACPs. A thioesterase gene will be codon-optimized for expression in yeast, and subsequently expressed and directed to the mitochondria in a similar fashion as described above. EXAMPLE 12

Expression of mitochondrial formate dehydrogenase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Yeast contains a formate dehydrogenase enzyme which is localized to the cytosol. Expression of formate dehydrogenase in the mitochondria might be required to breakdown the toxic byproduct formate of the decarbonylation reaction. Overexpression of endogenous formate dehydrogenase Fdhl and/or Fdh2 and localization of these proteins to the

mitochondria can be achieved by introducing a 5' mitochondrial localization signal into each gene (as has been described for others genes in example 1 1).

EXAMPLE 13

Construction of a cytosolic pathway for medium-chain saturated fatty acid production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

This chimeric cytosolic pathway, composed of an acetyl-CoA C-acetyltransferase (YqeF or ErglOp), a 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (FadA or Fox3p), a 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase and enoyl-CoA hydratase multifunctional enzyme (FadB or Fox2p), a trans- enoyl-CoA reductase (tdTER) and a thioesterase (Teslp) (Figure 7), allows the increased total production of medium-chain fatty acids from cytosolic acetyl-CoA as well as an increase in the medium-chain/long-chain fatty acid production ratio. This was shown by analysis of produced fatty alcohols after transforming the constructed strains with a "fatty-acid to fatty alcohol" pathway (Figure 8). It can also be coupled with different thioesterase homologues (with different chain-length specificities) as terminator enzymes (see example 14) for regulation of the desired fatty acid chain-length. Yeast genes FOX2 (NT ID 48), FOX3 (NT ID 49), ERG10 (NT ID 50) and TES1 (NT ID 51) were amplified by PCR from genomic DNA extracted from S. cerevisiae strain CEN.PK 113-11C, using the primers PR ID 80 to 87. These primers were designed to amplify these genes excluding the correspondent peroxisome- targeting signal peptide present in FOX2, FOX3 and TES1. Truncated genes lacking the sequence coding for the signal peptide were then named FOX2c, FOX3c and TESJc respectively. The bacterial genes yqeF (NT ID 54), fadA (NT ID 52), fadB (NT ID 53) and tdTER (NT ID 55) were optimized for expression in S. cerevisiae and synthesized by

GenScript (Piscataway, NJ, USA). These bacterial genes were amplified using primers PR ID 72-79. The primers from PR ID 69-87 allow the cloning of the genes with the pPGKl promoter or the bidirectional promoter pPGKl-pTEFl in the pX-2-loxP-KlURA3, pXI-3- loxP-URA3 and pXI-5-loxp-Sphis5 vectors (Mikkelsen et al, 2012) following the USER cloning method (Nour-Eldin et al, 2006). Primers PR ID 69 and 70 were used to amplify the bidirectional promoter pPGKl-pTEFl from pSP-GMl, primers PR ID 71 and 70 were used to amplify the pPGKl promoter also from pSP-GMl. pPGKl -TESlc was cloned into the pX-2- 1OXP-K1URA3 vector; either fadA-pPGKl-pTEFl-fadB or FOX3c-pPGKl-pTEFl-FOX2c were cloned into pXI-3-loxP-URA3 vector; and either tdTER-pPGKl -p TEF1 -yqeF or tdTER- pPGKl-pTEFl-ERGlO were cloned into pXI-5-loxp-Sphis5 vector Figure 9. All the integration constructs were linearized by restriction using Notl restriction enzyme and transformed into a poxl faal faa4 strain (EXAMPLE 16). After integration of the pXI-3- 1OXP-URA3- and the pXI-5-loxp-Sphis5-derived constructs, the cells were transformed with a Cre recombinase expression plasmid to delete auxotrophy markers by recombination of loxP sites flanking the marker. Next, the originated strain was transformed with the pX-2-loxP- K1URA3 vector containing the pPGKl-TESl insert. This resulted in the following strains:

Rbee (poxlA faalA faa4A yqeFfadAfadB tdTER TESlc)

Rbye (poxlA faalA faa4A ERG 10 fadA fadB tdTER TESlc)

Rbey (poxlA faal A faa4A yqeF FOX3c FOX2c tdTER TES1 c)

Rbyy (poxlAfaalA faa4A ERG10 FOX3c FOX2c tdTER TESlc)

EXAMPLE 14

Regulation of produced fatty-acid chain length by expression of different thioesterase genes

Different thioesterase homologues have different chain-length specificities. Therefore, coupling of any of the homologues with a fatty-acyl-CoA producing pathway results in production of fatty acids with different chain lengths depending on the thioesterase gene being expressed. Integration of this regulation on an alkane/alkene producing pathway from acetyl-CoA allows production of hydrocarbons with a desired specific chain-length.

Thioesterase genes tesA, tesB,fadM or yciA from E. coli were used for construction of Rbyy strain (EXAMPLE 13) instead of the TESlc thioesterase gene. The genes tesA (NT ID 56), tesB (NT ID 57), fadM (NT ID 58) and yciA (NT ID 59) were optimized for expression in yeast and synthesized by GenScript (Piscataway, NJ, USA). These genes were amplified using primers PR ID 88 to 95. All the primers used allow the cloning of any of the selected amplified genes with the pPGKl promoter in the pX-2-loxP-KlURA3 (Mikkelsen et al, 2012) integration vector following the USER cloning method (Nour-Eldin et al, 2006). As explained in EXAMPLE 13, FOX3-pPGKl-pTEFl-FOX2 was cloned into P XI-3-loxP-URA3 vector and tdTER-pPGKl -p TEF1-ERG10 was cloned into pXI-5-loxp-Sphis5 vector. All the integration constructs were linearized by restriction using Notl restriction enzyme and transformed into strain poxl faal faa4 strain (EXAMPLE 16). After integration of the pXI-3- loxP-URA3- and the pXI-5-loxp-Sphis5-derived constructs, the cells were transformed with a Cre recombinase expression plasmid to delete auxotrophy markers by recombination of loxP sites flanking the marker. The originated strain was then transformed with the pX-2-loxP- K1URA3 plasmid containing either pPGKl-tesA, pPGKl-tesB, pPGKl-fadM or pPGKl-yciA.

EXAMPLE 15

Expression of alternative fatty acid synthases for production of short/medium chain fatty acids

Expression of a heterologous fatty acid synthase and alternative thioesterase modules as described by Leber and DaSilva (2013) will enable the synthesis of medium chain fatty acids and products derived thereof

EXAMPLE 16

Elimination of storage lipid formation (deletion of LROl, DGAl, ARE1, ARE2) and beta- oxidation (deletion ofPOXl), and free fatty acid activation (deletion ofFAAl, FAA4)

This example describes the elimination of non-essential pathways that consume (activated) fatty acids and thus compete with alkane/alkene production, i.e. storage lipid formation and beta-oxidation. "Activated fatty acid" as used herein means fatty acids coupled to CoA or ACP.

For the deletion of AREl, the 5' and 3' ends of the ARE1 open reading frame were individually amplified from genomic DNA of CEN.PK 113-5D (MATa ura3-52) by PCR using primers PR ID 1/2 and PR ID 3/4, respectively. The kanMX expression cassette was amplified in two overlapping parts from plasmid pUG6 (Gtlldener et al, 1996) using primers PR ID 5/6 and 7/8, respectively. KanMX was looped out as described previously with help of the Cre recombinase expression plasmid pSH47 (Guldener et al, 1996).

The same approach was used for deletion of AREl, DGAl, LROl, and POXL Primers PR ID 9-12 were used for deletion of ARE2, primers PR ID 13-16 were used for deletion of DGAl, primers PR ID 17-20 were used for deletion of LROl, and primers PR ID 21-24 were used for deletion of POX1.

Deletion of FAA1 and FAA4 is e.g. described in Runguphan and Keasling (2013).

EXAMPLE 17

Over expression of fatty acid biosynthetic genes (ACC1, FAS1, FAS2, ACB1) This example describes the overexpression of genes leading to increased production of (activated) fatty acids.

Overexpression of ACC1, FAS1 and FAS2 is e.g. described in Runguphan and Keasling (2013).

Mutations S659A and SI 157A were introduced into the ACC1 gene by PCR to prevent enzyme regulation by phosphorylation, i.e. to increase enzyme activity.

ACB1 (NT ID 47) was amplified by PCR from genomic DNA of S. cerevisiae with the oligonucleotide primers PR ID 25/26 and restricted with BamHl/Kpnl. The BamHl/Kpnl digested DNA fragment was ligated into the BamHl/Kpnl sites of vector pSP-GM2 (Partow et al, 2010; Chen et ai, 2012) to construct pSP-A. Yeast strains were transformed with the resulting plasmid.

EXAMPLE 18

Expression of Rhodosporidium toruloides fatty acid biosynthetic genes ACC1, FAS1, and FAS2 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

As Rhodosporidium toruloides has higher efficiency in lipid production, fatty acid biosynthetic genes RtACCl (NT ID 19), RtFASl (NT ID 20), andRtFAS2 (NT ID 21) from R. toruloides can be used for improving the production of fatty acids as well as fatty acid derivatives. The genes were cloned from a cDNA library as described previously (Zhu et al, 2012) with primers pairs RtACC-F (PR ID 120)/RtACC-R (PR ID 121), RtFASl -F (PR ID 116)1 RtF AS 1 -R (PR ID 117) and RtFAS2-F (PR ID 118)/ RtFAS2-R (PR ID 119) and assembled as has been described in Shao et al (2009) and Zhou et al (2012). The expression of RtACCl and RtFASl/2, as well their combined expression, increased fatty acid biosynthesis in JV03 {Saccharomyces cerevisiae MATa MAL2-8c SUC2 uraS-52 HIS3 arelA dgalA. are2A IrolA ροχΙΔ, Valle-Rodriguez et al 2014) (Figure 10).

EXAMPLE 19

Increase of NADPH supply (GAPN, GDH)

This example describes different ways to increase the supply of NADPH, an essential cofactor in fatty acid biosynthesis.

Heterologous expression of a non-phosphorylating NADP+-dependent

glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPN) from Streptococcus miitans is e.g.

described in Kocharin et al (2013). Deletion of GDH1 encoding NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase and overexpression of GDH2 encoding NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase is e.g.

described in Asadollahi et al (2009).

EXAMPLE 20

Conversion of fatty acyl-CoA to fatty alcohols by expression of Marinobacter aquaeolei VT8 Maqu_2507 fatty acyl-CoA reductase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

This invention relates to the direct conversion of fatty acyl-CoA into fatty alcohols by a fatty acyl-CoA reductase.

The plasmid pAlcoholl was constructed similar to the method described in example 5, 7, 8, 9. For expression in yeast codon optimized genes Marinobacter aquaeolei VT8

Maqu_2507 (NT ID 16) was cloned using primers with to the gene homologous regions (PR ID 206-207). The pathway was subsequently assembled in PYX212 as described in Shao et al, 2009 and Zhou et al, 2012. pAlcoholl enabled the production of 3.4 mg/L fatty alcohol in S. cerevisiae CEN.PK 113-11C in shake flask fermentation.

Cells are cultivated and analyzed as described in example 1.

EXAMPLE 21

Construction of an intracellular alkane sensor by the expression ofYarrowia lipolytica Yas3 repressor and Yasl, Yas2 activator and a fluorescent protein expressed from an AREl containing promoter in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

The purpose of this example is to describe the design of an alkane biosensor that can be used to screen for better alkane producer. This can be a strain in which the fatty acid substrate is overproduced (e.g. as described in example 16), or classical mutagenesis experiments to optimize the enzymes of the pathway, or screening of homologue and/or libraries to improve the alkane production. It is based on the negative regulator (Yas3) and two activators (Yasl, Yas2) of alkane metabolism enzymes in the alkane consuming yeast Yarrowia lipolytica. The repressor Yas3 is released from the alkane response elements (AREl) in a promoter in the presence of medium chain alkanes.

The Yarrowia alkane-reponsive promoter of the ALK1 gene was cloned in front of a reporter gene such as GFP to screen for alkane production. Alternatively, the alkane response element was integrated as one or several copies into a S. cerevisiae promoter (here the TEF1 promoter) and cloned in front of the reporter gene. For this, a truncated version of the TEF1 promoter was used and combined with three AREl binding sites in front of it (NT ID 64). For another strategy three ARE1 binding sites were integrated at specific positions in the complete TEF promoter (NT ID 65).

In addition, the Yarrowia lypolytica transcriptional activators Yasl and Yas2 as well as the repressor Yas3 necessary for alkane-mediated transcription regulation will be introduced into S. cerevisiae together with the reporter construct.

Expressing the repressor gene Yas3 in presence of the two activators Yasl and Yas2 leads to a 100-fold repression of the green fluorescence reporter signal, indicating the functionality of the system and the sensor range. Exposing the system to alkanes gave a clear response and increased green fluorescence signal, as demonstrated in Figure 1 1.

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Table 1. Plasmids.

pScACCl p423GPD ACC1 pRtACCl p423GPD PvtACCl pAlcohol pYX212 FaCoAR

1

pAlkane9 pYX212 PlLuxD, PlLuxC, PlLuxE, SeFAD,

EcTesA'

pFAR pYX212 SeFAR

Table 2. Oligonucleotide primers.

SEQ

PR ID Name Sequence (5'→3')

ID NO

ARE1- TGTGTTTCCGTACCGCAC 1 UP-f

ARE1- 2

CAGCGTACGAAGCTTCAGCTGCGGAATTGAGTCTGC UP-r

ARE1- GTGATATCAGATCCACTAGGCAACACCAAGTTTCTACG 3

G DW-f

ARE1- ATTTTTGTCACCTGCAAACTC 4 DW-r kanMX- CTGAAGCTTCGTACGCTG 5 1-f kanMX- TCACCATGAGTGACGACTGA 6 1-r kanMX- TTCCAACATGGATGCTGAT 7 2-f kanMX- CTAGTGGATCTGATATCAC 8 2-r

ARE2- CTCGTCGGTTTATCTGCC 9 UP-f 0 ARE2- CAGCGTACGAAGCTTCAGCGTTGAGCTTTTGGATGC 10 UP-r 1 ARE2- 11

GTGATATCAGATCCACTAGGCTCGGTATCTGCATGGG DW-f ARE2- GC AC GATATGAATAGC AGTGG 12 DW-r

DGA1- CGTTATTGTAACTGGTAATCAGAG 13 UP-f

DGA1- CAGCGTACGAAGCTTCAGCCTTTCGGTAATACCGGC 14 UP-r

DGA1- GTGATATCAGATCCACTAGAATGTTGTTGTTGGAAGGC 15 DW-f

DGA1- GCTTTCCTAAACTTACATTCAAA 16 DW-r

LROl- CTCCTTTGTACTTCTTTGTTCC 17 UP-f

LROl- CAGCGTACGAAGCTTCAGCCTGTTGATGATGAATGTGG 18 UP-r

LROl- GTGATATCAGATCCACTAGCAAGCGGTAATGGCGATC 19 DW-f

LROl- CGGTTGTTTTTCCTCTATGC 20 DW-r

POX1- GCCCTATATTTACGGTATTAGTTG 21 UP-f

POX1- CAGCGTACGAAGCTTCAGGGGATTAATAGTAGTACGTC 22 UP-r TCGT

POX1- GTGATATCAGATCCACTAGCAGATGGGGCAGGGAAG 23 DW-f

POX1- GTAGTCATGTCATTGATTCGTCA 24 DW-r

ACBl-f AGTTTTAATTACAAGGATCCACTATGGTTTCCCAATTAT 25

TCG

ACBl-r GCGGATCTTAGCTAGCCGCGGTACCCTAAGAGGAGTAC 26

TTGGCA PpG l- AACTTAGAUTAGATTGCTATGCTTTC 27

PrEFi-fw

PpGKl- ATTTGTTGUAAAAAGTAGATAATTACTTCC 28

PTEFi-rev

PpGKi-fw CGTGCGAUGGAAGTACCTTCAAAGAATGG 29 yqeF-fw ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGAAGGATGTCGTAATCGT 30

TG

yqeF-rev CACGCGAUTTATTCGTCTCTTTCGATAGTCAATG 31 fadA-fw CGTGCGAUTTAGACTCTTTCAAATACAGTAGCG 32 fadA-rev ATCTAAGTUTTAATAAAACAATGGAACAAGTAGTAATC 33

GTAGAC

fadB-fw ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGTTGTATAAAGGTGACAC 34

ATTGTAC

fadB-rev CACGCGAUTTAGGCAGTTTTCAAGTCACC 35 tdTER- CGTGCGAUTTAGATTCTATCGAATCTTTCGAC 36 fw

tdTER- ATCTAAGTUTTAATAAAACAATGATAGTAAAGCCAATG 37 rev GTAAGG

FOX3C- CGTGCGAUCTATTCTTTAATAAAGATGGCGG 38 fw

FOX3c- ATCTAAGTUTTAATAAAACAATGGGTAAGGGTGAATC 39 rev GAAG

FOX2c- ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGCCTGGAAATTTATCCTTC 40 fw

FOX2c- CACGCGAUTTATTTTGCCTGCGATAGTTTTAC 41 rev

ERG 10- ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGTCTCAGAACGTTTACATT 42 fw GTATC

ERG10- CACGCGAUTCATATCTTTTCAATGACAATAGAGG 43 rev

TESlc- ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGAGTGCTTCCAAAATGGC 44 fw CATG

TESlc- CACGCGAUTCATCGAATGTCTCGTTCTGACC 45 rev

tesA-fw ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGGCCGATACTTTGTTAATT 46

TTG

tesA-rev CACGCGAUTCAAGAATCGTGATTGACTAATGG 47 90 tesB-fw ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGTCTCAAGCTTTGAAGAA 48 CTTG

91 tesB-rev CACGCGAUTCAGTTGTGGTTTCTCATAACACC 49

92 fadM-fw ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGCAAACTCAAATCAAGGT 50

TAGA

93 fadM-rev CACGCGAUTCACTTAACCATTTGTTCCAACTT 51

94 yciA-fw ACAACAAAUATAAAACAATGTCTACTACTCACAACGTT 52

CCA

95 yciA-rev CACGCGAUTCATTCAACTGGCAAAGCTCTTGG 53

104 Acrl-Fl GCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAATGAA 54

TAAGAAGTTGGAAGC

105 Acrl-Rl GGATACCCGGGTCGACGCGTAAGCTTGTGGGCCCTATC 55

ACCAATGTTCACCAGGG

106 FAcoAR GCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAATGAA 56 1-F TTATTTCTTGACAGGTG

107 FAcoAR GGATACCCGGGTCGACGCGTAAGCTTGTGGGCCCTATT 57 1-R ACCAATAGATACCTCTCA

108 npgA-F2 GGAAGTAATTATCTACTTTTTACAACAAATATAACAAA 58

ATGGTGCAAGACACATCAAG

109 npgA-R2 GACATAACTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCT 59

TAGGATAGGCAATTACACAC

110 SynaaC- GGAAGTAATTATCTACTTTTTACAACAAATATAACAAA 60 F ATGGACTCAGGTCACGGTGC

111 SynaaC- GACATAACTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCT 61 R CAGAACATTTCGTCTATCAAG

112 CYP4G2 CTCATTAAAAAACTATATCAATTAATTTGAATTAACTT 62 -R ACATTGCCTTCATTGCTTC

113 CYP4G2 GAAAGCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAA 63 -F TGGACTCCGCCAACAACTC

114 MmCAR CAAGAACTTAGTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAAC 64 -Fl AAAATGTCACCTATCACCAGAGAAG 115 MmCAR CTTATTTAATAATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTC 65 -Rl GCTTACAACAAACCCAACAATCTC

116 RtFASl- CTATAACTACAAAAAACACATACATAAACTAAAAATG 66 F AACGGCCGAGCGACGCGGAG

117 RtFAS 1 - CTCATTAAAAAACTATATCAATTAATTTGAATTAACTC 67 R AGAGCCCGCCGAAGACGTCGAG

118 RtFAS2- GACATAACTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCC 68 R TACTTCTGGGCGATGACGACGG

119 RtFAS2- GAAAGCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAA 69 F TGGTCGCGGCGCAGGACTTGC

120 RtACCl CAAGAACTTAGTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAAC 70 -F AAAATGCCATTCTCTGGCGAGGCGAAG

121 RtACCl GGATACCCGGGTCGACGCGTAAGCTTGTGGGCCCTACT 71 -R AGGCGAGGATGCGGGCGAGG

122 hfdl(up) GATTATCAATGTCCCAGTTATACG 72 -F

123 hfdl(up) TAAGTTTGGTCGTTTCATTCAG 73 -R

124 hfd(dn)- GAGTACGAGGATCTTGATGAGAC 74 F

125 hfd(dn)R CACTTGTTATTGCCATTTCTGTC 75

126 hfdl(up) CGAAAGGTTACTTATACATCAAATAATTAATTAACCTT 76 -URA3- AAACATTACGTTCACATGTTGGTGATAAATTACTATG

R

127 URA3(hf GGTTAATTAATTATTTGATGTATAAGTAACCTTTCGTTT 77 dl)-F AAAAATTTCATATGGGCGATAATATATCGTGATTCTGG

GTAGAAGATCG

128 URA3(hf CTATTATCTTGTTAATGGTCTCATCAAGATCCTCGTACT 78 dl)-R CCATCGATAAGCTTGATATCG 129 Pox 1 (up) GATTCCTTCAGTTCCACTTTTTGC 79 -F

130 Po 1 (up) GTAGCATCGTAATAGTCCGTGTC 80 -R

131 Poxl(dn) GATCTCTAAAGTTGTGCAGCCAC 81 -F

132 Poxl(dn) CGCATTAGCTGCACCACCTAAC 82 -R

133 Pox 1 (up) GAATTGAAACAAAAGTCGCAAAACAGAGGGTTCGAAG 83

-UAR3- GAAAACAGGAAACCTCTACTCACATATCGCAATACTAA

R TTTATTAT

134 URA3(p CTTCGAACCCTCTGTTTTGCGACTTTTGTTTCAATTCAA 84 oxl)-F CTAGTGTCGCCAAGTTTTAACGTGATTCTGGGTAGAAG

ATCG

135 URA3(p GAGCCAATAGTTGTGGCTGCACAACTTTAGAGATCCAT 85 oxl)-R CGATAAGCTTGATATCG

136 FAAl(u CACCCACCCATCGCATATCAGG 86 p)-F

137 FAAl(u CTTAACATCCCTCCAACCCATAGC 87 p)-R

138 FAAl(d GAAATTAGAGTCCGTTTACAGATC 88 n)-F

139 FAAl(d GTCAAAGAACACTATGCCTGCTAG 89 n)-R

140 FAAl(u CTGAAAAAGTGCTTTAGTATGATGAGGCTTTCCTATCA 90 P)- TGGAAATGTTGATCCATTACATATTGTTGTCTTTTTTTG

URA3-R TC

141 URA3(F GATAGGAAAGCCTCATCATACTAAAGCACTTTTTCAGT 91 AA1)-F TTTTTGCTTTAGAACTGCTACCGTGATTCTGGGTAGAA

GATCG 142 URA3(F CAACATATTCGTTAGATCTGTAAACGGACTCTAATTTC 92 AA1)-R CATCGATAAGCTTGATATCG

143 FAA4(u GTCCCCATCAATTAAGAACCCTC 93 p)-F

144 FAA4(u GATGCTGAGGAGTTTATGGGTC 94 p)-R

145 FAA4(d CCTTTACCGATGATGGCTGGTTC 95 n)-F

146 FAA4(d GATGTAACAAGACCGTTTTCTGGAG 96 n)-R

147 FAA4(u GAAAATGAAACGTAGTGTTTATGAAGGGCAGGGGGGA 97 P)- AAGTAAAAAACTATGTCTTCCTTTACATTTTGATGCGT

URA3-R ACTTCTTAG

148 URA3(F CTTTCCCCCCTGCCCTTCATAAACACTACGTTTCATTTT 98 AA4)-F CTAAGAGCATCAATTTGCGTGATTCTGGGTAGAAGATC

G

149 URA3(F GATATCACCGGTACGGAACCAGCCATCATCGGTAAAG 99 AA4)-R GCATCGATAAGCTTGATATCG

150 Orfl594- GGATCCAAAACAATGTTCGG 100 CP FW

151 Orfl594- GATTGCTAAGGCTAAAGGTTGG 101 CP RV

152 Acrl-CP GCTTTAATCACTGGTGCCTC 102 FW

153 Acrl-CP TTCACCAATGTTCACCAGG 103 RV

154 Orfl593- GCCACAATTAGAAGCCTCCTTAG 104 CP FW

155 Orfl593- CTGCTGCCAAACCGTATGC 105 CP RV 156 NpFAD- GCCTACTCCAGAATCAACGC 106 CP FW

157 NpFAD- GCCTTACTCTCTGCGAAGTG 107 CP RV

158 Fdx FW ATCGAAGCGGCCGCAAAACAATGCCAAAGATTGTTATT 108

TTGC

159 Fdx RV ATCGTCGAGCTCTTAATGCTCACGCGCATG 109

160 Fpr FW ATGGCTGATTGGGTAACAGG 110

161 Fpr RV ACAGCGGAGCATTACTGGTAA 111

162 Fdx M ATCGAAGCGGCCGCAAAACAATGCTTTCTCTTCGTCAA 112 FW TCTATTCGTTTTTTTAAACGTTCTGGTATTATGCCAAAG ATTGTTATTTTGC

163 Fpr M CATTATCCCGGGAAAACAATGCTTTCTCTTCGTCAATCT 113 FW ATTCGTTTTTTTAAACGTTCTGGTATTATGGCTGATTGG

GTAACAGG

164 Fpr M CATTATCTCGAGTTACCAGTAATGCTCCGCTGT 114 RV

165 npgA AACTACAAAAAACACATACATAAACTAAAAATGCTTTC 115 FW TCTTCGTCAATCTATTCGTTTTTTTAAACGTTCTGGTAT

TATGGTGCAAGACACATCAAGCG

166 npgA AAAAAACTATATCAATTAATTTGAATTAACTTAGGATA 116 RV GGCAATTACACACCCCA

167 NPFAD GTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAACAAAATGCTTTC 117 FW TCTTCGTCAATCTATTCGTTTTTTTAAACGTTCTGGTAT

TATGCAACAATTAACAGACCAATCAAAGG

168 NPFAD CTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCTCAAGCAC 118 RV CTATCAAACCGTAAGCAC

169 MmCAR ACAAAAAGTTTTTTTAATTTTAATCAAAAAATGCTTTCT 119 FW CTTCGTCAATCTATTCGTTTTTTTAAACGTTCTGGTATT

ATGTCACCTATCACCAGAGAAGAAAG 170 MmCAR AAATCATTAAAGTAACTTAAGGAGTTAAATTTACAACA 120 RV AACCCAACAATCTCAAA

171 ETR1 TAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAATGCTTCC 121 FW CACATTCAAACGTTACATG

172 ETR1 GGGTCGACGCGTAAGCTTGTGGGCCCTATTACCATTCT 122 RV AAAACAACCATTTTTTTCTTCC

173 HFA1 TTATCTACTTTTTACAACAAATATAACAAAATGAGATC 123 FW TATAAGAAAATGGGCGTACG

174 HFAlb TTGGTCCGAAGTGGTGATCACG 124 FW

175 HFAlb GATCATGTTACGCCCTTCAGGATATTC 125 RV

176 HFAla GCAGGAAAAGAAACAGATTTCTTGACTAG 126 RV

177 HFAlc CAGTACATCGTCTCGAGGAAATTGTG 127 FW

178 HFA1 AATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTCGCCTATCTCT 128 RV TTCGCTTACTGTCCACCAAC

187 PGKl GGGGTGGTTTAGTTTAGTAGAA 129 SEQ

188 ADH1 GCAACCTGACCTACAGGAAAGA 130 SEQ

189 TEFl TTTTACTTCTTGCTCATTAGAAAG 131 SEQ

190 CYCl GGACCTAGACTTCAGGTTGTC 132 SEQ

192 MdCPR- GTGACATAACTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTAT 133 R CTTAACTCCAAACATCAGCGGAG

193 MdCPR- CAAGAACTTAGTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAAC 134 F AAAATGAGTGCCGAACACGTTGAAG 194 Orfl594- CAAGAACTTAGTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAAC 135

F AAAATGTTCGGTTTAATAGGTC

195 Orfl594- CTTATTTAATAATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTC 136 R GCTCAGATTGCTAAGGCTAAAG

196 P450G2- CTCATTAAAAAACTATATCAATTAATTTGAATTAACTT 137 R ACATTGCCTTCATTGCTTC

197 P450G2- GAAAGCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAA 138 F TGGACTCCGCCAACAACTC

198 TPIp-F2 GAGTAAAAAAGGAGTAGAAACATTTTGAAGCTATGTTT 139

AAAGATTACGGATATTTAAC

199 TPIp-R2 GCTTCTTCGACGAGGGTTCCATTTTTAGTTTATGTATGT 140

GTTTTTTG

200 TDH2t- CAAATGCCTATTGTGCAGATGTTATAATATCTGTGCGT 141 R2 GCGAAAAGCCAATTAGTGTG

201 Acrl-F2 CAAGAACTTAGTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAAC 142

AAAATGAATAAGAAGTTGGAAG

202 Acrl-R2 CTTATTTAATAATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTC 143

GCTCACCAATGTTCACCAGGG

203 SmCPR- GACATAACTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCT 144 R2 TACCATACATCGCGCAAGTAC

206 FaCoAR GCTTAAATCTATAACTACAAAAAACACATACATAAACT 145 l(pYX)- AAAAATGAATTATTTCTTGACAGGTGG

F

207 FaCoAR CGGATACCCGGGTCGACGCGTAAGCTTGTGGGCCCTAT 146

KpYX)- TACCAATAGATACCTCTCATAATGG

R

208 SeFAR- CTATAACTACAAAAAACACATACATAAACTAAAAATG 147 F2 TTCGGTTTAATAGGTCAC

209 SeFAR- CTCATTAAAAAACTATATCAATTAATTTGAATTAACTC 148 R2 AGATTGCTAAGGCTAAAG 210 SeADO- CAAGAACTTAGTTTCGAATAAACACACATAAACAAAC 149 Fl AAAATGCCACAATTAGAAGCCTC

211 SeADO- CTTATTTAATAATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTC 150 Rl GCTTAGACTGCTGCCAAACCGTATG

212 EcFd-Fl GAAAGCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAA 151

TGCCAAAGATTGTTATTTTG

213 EcFd-Rl CTAAATCATTAAAGTAACTTAAGGAGTTAAATTTAATG 152

CTCACGCGCATGGTTG

214 EcFNR- GACATAACTAATTACATGACTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCT 153 Fl TACCAGTAATGCTCCGCTG

215 EcFNR- GGAAGTAATTATCTACTTTTTACAACAAATATAACAAA 154 Rl ATGGCTGATTGGGTAACAGG

216 SeFAD TTATCTACTTTTTACAACAAATATAACAAAATGCCACA

FW ATTAGAAGCCTCCTTAGAAT

217 SeFAD AATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTCGCTTAGACTG

RV CTGCCAAACCGTATGC

218 NpFAD AATAAAAATCATAAATCATAAGAAATTCGCTCAAGCA

RV CCTATCAAACCGTAAGCAC

219 TesA TAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAAATGGCCGA

FW TACTTTGTTAATTTTGG

220 TesA RV CCGGGTCGACGCGTAAGCTTGTGGGCCCTATCAAGAAT

CGTGATTGACTAATGGTTG

Table 3. Polypeptide sequences. CnFatB MVASVAASAFFPTPSFSSTASAKASKTIGEGSESLDVRGIVAK 155 1 PTS SS AAMQGKVKAQ AVPKINGTKVGLKTESQKAEED AAPS S

APRTFYNQLPDWSVLLAAVTTIFLAAEKQWTLLDWKPRRPD

MLTDAFSLGKIVQDGLIFRQNFSIRSYEIGADRTASIETLMNHL

QETALNHVRNAGLLGDGFGATPEMSKRNLIWVVTKMQVLV

EH YP S WGD VVE VDT WVGAS GKNGMRRD WHVRD YRTGQTI

LRATSVWVMMNKHTRKLSKMPEEVRAEIGPYFVEHAAIVDE

DSRKLPKLDDDTADYIKWGLTPRWSDLDVNQHVNNVKYIG

WILESAPISILENHELASMTLEYRRECGRDSVLQSLTAISNDCT

GGLPEAS IECQHLLQLECGAEIVRGRTQ WRPRRAS GPTS AGS A

AbTesA MAKTILILGDSLSAGYGINPEQGWVALLQKRLDQQFPKQHKV 156

INASVSGETTSGALARLPKLLTTYRPNVVVIELGGNDALRGQP PQMIQSNLEKLIQHSQKAKSKVVVFGMKIPPNYGTAYSQAFE NNYKVVSQTYQVKLLPFFLDGVAGHKSLMQKDQIHPNAKAQ S ILLNNA YP YIKGAL

PILuxC MTKKISFIINGQVEIFPESDDLVQSINFGDNSVYLPILNNSHVK 157

NIIDYNENNKLRLFINIVNFLYTVGQRWKNEEYSRRRTYIRDL

KKYMGYSEAMAKLEANWISMILCSKGGLYDVVENELGSRHI

MDEWLPQDESYIKAFPKGKSIHLLAGNVPLSGIMSILRAILTK

NQCIIKTSSTDPFTANALALSFIDVDPNHPITRSLSVVYWPHQG

DTSLAKEIMQHMDVIVAWGGEDAINWAVEHAPPYADVIKFG

SKKSFCIIDNPVDLTSAATGAAHDICFYDQRACFSAQNIYYMG

NQYEEFKLALIEKLNLYAHILPNAKKDFDEKAAYSLVQKESL

FAGLKVEVDVHQRWMIIESNAGVEFNQPLGRCVYLHHVDNI

EQVLPYVQKNKTQTISIFPWESAFKYRDALALRGAERTVEAG

MNNIFRVGGSHDGMRPLQRLVTYISHERPSHYTAKDVAVEIE

QTRFLEEDKFLVFVP

PILuxD MENKSKYKTIDHVLCVEGNKKIHVWETLPEENSPKRKNTIIIA 158

SGFARRMDHFAGLAEYLSRNGFHVIRYDSLHHVGLSSGTIDE

FTMSIGKQSLLAVVDWLNTRKTNNRGILASSLSARIVYASLSEI

NVSFLITAVGVVNLRYTLERALGFDYLSLPINELPNNLDFEGH

KLGAEVFARDCLDFGWEDLTSTINSMMYLDIPFIAFTA DN

WVKQDEVITLLSNIRSNRCKIYSLLGSSHDLGENLVVLRNFYQ

SVTKAAIAMDNDRLDIDVDIIEPSFEHLTIATVNERRMKIEIEN

QAISLS

PILuxE MTSYVDKQEIIASSEIDDLIFSSDPLAWSYDEQEKIRNKFVLDA 159

FR HYKHCQEYRHYCQVHKVDDNITEIDDIPVFPTSVFKFTRL

LTSQENEIESWFTSSGTSGLKSQVARNRLSIERLLGSVSYGMK

YVGSWFDHQIELVNLGPDRFNAHNIWFKYVMSLVELLYPTTF

TVMEERIDFVKTLNSLERIKNQGKDICLIGSPYFIYLLCQYMK

DKNISFYGDKNLYIITGGGWKSYEKESLKRDDFNHLLFDTFN

LNNISQIRDIFNQVELNTCFFEDEMQRKRVPPWVYARALDPET

LKPVPDGMPGLMSYMDASSTSYPAFIVTDDVGIMSREYGQYP

GVLVEILRRVNTRAQKGCALSLNQAFNS

SePetF MATYKVTLVNAAEGLNTTIDVADDTYILDAAEEQGIDLPYSC 160

RAGACSTCAGKVVSGTVDQSDQSFLDDDQIAAGFVLTCVAY PTSDVTIETHKEEDLY 7 SePetH MLNASVAGGAATTTYGNRLFIYEVIGLRQAEGEPSDSSIRRSG 161

STFFKVPYSRMNQEMQRILRLGG IVSIRPAEEAAANNGAAP

LQAAAEEPAAAPTPAPAAKKHSAEDVPVNIYRPNKPFVGKVL

SNEPLVQEGGIGVVQHLTFDISEGDLRYIEGQSIGIIPDGTDDK

GKPHKLRLYSIASTRHGDHVDDKTVSLCVRQLQYQNEAGETI

NGVCSTFLCGLKPGDDVKITGPVGKEMLLPADTDANVIMMG

TGTGIAPFRAYLWRMFKDNERAF SEYQFNGKAWLIFGIPTT

ANILYKEELEALQAQYPDNFRLTYAISREQKNEAGGRMYIQD

RVAEHADEIWNLLKDE THVYICGLRGMEDGIDQAMTVAAA

KEDVVWSDYQRTLKKAGRWHVETY able 4. Codon optimized gene sequences.

TGTTTGTTGATCCAATCTTTGATAATCGAATGCTTTGCTATCGC

AGCCTATAATATCTACATTCCAGTCGCTGATGCATTCGCCAGAA

AGATTACCGAAGGTGTAGTTAGAGACGAATATTTGCACAGAAA

CTTCGGTGAAGAATGGTTGAAGGCAAACTTCGATGCTTCTAAG

GCAGAATTGGAAGAAGCTAATAGACAAAACTTGCCTTTAGTCT

GGTTGATGTTAAATGAAGTAGCCGATGACGCTAGAGAATTGGG

TATGGAAAGAGAATCATTAGTTGAAGACTTCATGATCGCATAC

GGTGAAGCCTTAGAAAACATCGGTTTTACTACCAGAGAAATAA

TGAGAATGTCCGCATACGGTTTGGCAGCAGTCTAAGAGCTC

NpFA TCTAGTTTTATTACAGCGGCCGCAAAACAATGCAACAATTAAC 164 D AGACCAATCAAAGGAATTAGACTTCAAATCAGAAACTTACAAA

GATGCCTACTCCAGAATCAACGCAATCGTCATTGAAGGTGAAC

AAGAAGCACATGAAAACTACATCACCTTGGCCCAATTATTACC

AGAATCCCATGATGAATTGATCAGATTGTCTAAGATGGAATCA

AGACACAAAAAGGGTTTTGAAGCCTGTGGTAGAAATTTGGCTG

TTACTCCTGACTTACAATTTGCCAAAGAATTTTTCTCTGGTTTGC

ACCAAAACTTCCAAACTGCTGCAGCCGAGGGTAAAGTTGTCAC

ATGTTTGTTGATCCAATCATTAATAATCGAATGCTTTGCTATCG

CTGCATATAATATCTACATTCCAGTTGCCGATGACTTCGCTAGA

AAAATTACAGAAGGTGTAGTTAAGGAAGAATATTCCCATTTGA

ACTTTGGTGAAGTCTGGTTAAAAGAACACTTCGCAGAGAGTAA

GGCCGAATTGGAATTAGCAAATAGACAAAACTTGCCTATCGTC

TGGAAAATGTTAAATCAAGTAGAAGGTGACGCTCATACCATGG

CAATGGAAAAGGATGCTTTGGTTGAAGACTTCATGATTCAATA

CGGTGAAGCATTATCAAACATAGGTTTTTCTACCAGAGACATT

ATGAGATTGAGTGCTTACGGTTTGATAGGTGCTTGAGAGCTC

Orf88 CTAAGTTTTATTACAGCGGCCGCAAAACAATGGCTACATTGAA 165 0/OleT GAGAGACAAGGGTTTAGACAACACATTGAAAGTATTGAAGCA

AGGTTACTTATACACCACCAACCAAAGAAATAGATTGAACACT

TCTGTTTTCCAAACAAAGGCATTAGGTGGTAAACCTTTCGTTGT

CGTAACTGGTAAAGAAGGTGCCGAAATGTTCTACAACAACGAT

GTTGTCCAAAGAGAAGGCATGTTGCCAAAGAGAATCGTTAACA

CTTTGTTCGGTAAAGGTGCCATCCATACAGTCGATGGTAAAAA

GCACGTAGACAGAAAAGCTTTGTTCATGTCATTGATGACTGAG

GGTAATTTGAACTACGTCAGAGAATTGACCAGAACTTTATGGC

ATGCCAATACACAAAGAATGGAATCTATGGATGAAGTCAACAT

ATACAGAGAATCAATCGTATTGTTGACAAAGGTTGGTACCAGA

TGGGCTGGTGTACAAGCACCACCTGAAGACATCGAAAGAATTG

CAACAGATATGGACATAATGATCGATTCCTTTAGAGCCTTGGG

TGGTGCTTTCAAAGGTTACAAAGCAAGTAAAGAAGCTAGAAGA

AGAGTTGAAGATTGGTTGGAAGAACAAATCATCGAAACCAGA

AAGGGTAACATTCATCCACCTGAAGGTACTGCCTTGTATGAATT

TGCTCACTGGGAAGATTACTTAGGTAACCCTATGGACTCCAGA

ACATGTGCTATTGATTTGATGAATACCTTCAGACCATTGATCGC

TATAAACAGATTCGTTTCTTTCGGTTTGCATGCAATGAATGAAA

ACCCTATAACCAGAGAAAAGATTAAATCAGAACCAGATTACGC

TTACAAGTTCGCACAAGAAGTTAGAAGATATTACCCATTTGTCC CTTTCTTACCTGGTAAAGCTAAGGTTGATATCGACTTCCAAGGT

GTTACAATTCCAGCAGGTGTCGGTTTGGCCTTAGACGTATATGG

TACTACACATGATGAATCCTTGTGGGATGACCCTAATGAATTCA

GACCAGAAAGATTCGAAACATGGGATGGTAGTCCTTTTGACTT

AATTCCACAAGGTGGTGGTGACTACTGGACCAACCACAGATGC

GCTGGTGAATGGATTACCGTTATCATCATGGAAGAAACTATGA

AGTACTTCGCAGAAAAGATTACTTACGATGTACCTGAACAAGA

TTTGGAAGTTGACTTAAACTCTATTCCAGGTTATGTAAAGAGTG

GTTTCGTTATTAAAAATGTCAGAGAAGTAGTAGATAGAACTTG

AGAGCTC

npgA ATGGTGCAAGACACATCAAGCGCAAGCACTTCGCCAATTTTAA 166

CAAGATGGTACATCGACACCCGCCCTCTAACCGCCTCAACAGC

AGCCCTTCCTCTCCTTGAAACCCTCCAGCCCGCTGATCAAATCT

CCGTCCAAAAATACTACCATCTGAAGGATAAACACATGTCTCT

CGCCTCTAATCTGCTCAAATACCTCTTCGTCCACCGAAACTGTC

GCATCCCCTGGTCTTCAATCGTGATCTCTCGAACCCCAGATCCG

CACAGACGACCATGCTATATTCCACCCTCAGGCTCACAGGAAG

ACAGCTTCAAAGACGGATATACCGGCATCAACGTTGAGTTCAA

CGTCAGCCACCAAGCCTCAATGGTCGCGATCGCGGGAACAGCT

TTTACTCCCAATAGTGGTGGGGACAGCAAACTCAAACCCGAAG

TCGGAATTGATATTACGTGCGTAAACGAGCGGCAGGGACGGAA

CGGGGAAGAGCGGAGCCTGGAATCGCTACGTCAATATATTGAT

ATATTCTCGGAAGTGTTTTCCACTGCAGAGATGGCCAATATAA

GGAGGTTAGATGGAGTCTCATCATCCTCACTGTCTGCTGATCGT

CTTGTGGACTACGGGTACAGACTCTTCTACACTTACTGGGCGCT

CAAAGAGGCGTATATAAAAATGACTGGGGAGGCCCTCTTAGCA

CCGTGGTTACGGGAACTGGAATTCAGTAATGTCGTCGCCCCGG

CCGCTGTTGCGGAGAGTGGGGATTCGGCTGGGGATTTCGGGGA

GCCGTATACGGGTGTCAGGACGACTTTATATAAAAATCTCGTT

GAGGATGTGAGGATTGAAGTTGCTGCTCTGGGCGGTGATTACC

TATTTGCAACGGCTGCGAGGGGTGGTGGGATTGGAGCTAGTTC

TAGACCAGGAGGTGGTCCAGACGGAAGTGGCATCCGAAGCCA

GGATCCCTGGAGGCCTTTCAAGAAGTTAGATATAGAGCGAGAT

ATCCAGCCCTGTGCGACTGGGGTGTGTAATTGCCTATCCTAA

SynA ATGGACTCAGGTCACGGTGCTCAATCAAGAATCAAGTTAGGTC 167 AC AAACAGGTTACAAGTTATCAACATATTTCTGCAAAAGTGGTCC

TAATTGGGAAAACCAACCACAAATCCATTGGAACTCTTTATTTT

CAACTGTCAAGATCCAATTGTCCTTATTCCCTTCTTCATTTCACT

TAATCATGGTAACTCCAATTAATTACCATAGTATCCACTGTTTG

GCAGATATTTGGGCCATAACAGGTGAAAATTTCGCTGATATTG

TAGCATTGAACGACAGACATTCTCACCCACCTGTTACCTTGACT

TACGCACAATTAAGAGAAGAAATTACAGCCTTTGCTGCTGGTT

TGCAATCATTAGGTGTTACCCCTCATCAACACTTAGCTATTTTC

GCAGATAATTCCCCAAGATGGTTTATAGCAGACCAAGGTAGTA

TGTTGGCAGGTGCCGTTAACGCTGTTAGATCAGCTCAAGCAGA

AAGACAAGAATTGTTGTACATCTTGGAAGATTCCAATAGTAGA

ACATTGATCGCAGAAAACAGACAAACCTTGTCTAAATTGGCTT

TAGATGGTGAAACCATTGACTTGAAGTTAATAATCTTGTTGACT

GATGAAGAAGTTGCCGAAGACTCAGCTATACCACAATATAATT

TCGCACAAGTCATGGCCTTAGGTGCTGGTAAAATTCCAACTCCT

GTACCAAGACAAGAAGAAGATTTGGCTACCTTAATATACACTT

CTGGTACTACAGGTCAACCAAAGGGTGTTATGTTGTCACATGG

TAATTTGTTGCACCAAGTTAGAGAATTGGATTCCGTCATCATTC

CTAGACCAGGTGACCAAGTTTTGAGTATTTTACCATGTTGGCAT

TCCTTGGAAAGAAGTGCTGAATATTTCTTGTTATCCAGAGGTTG

CACAATGAACTACACCAGTATCAGACATTTCAAGGGTGACGTT

AAGGACATAAAGCCTCATCACATAGTAGGTGTTCCAAGATTGT

GGGAATCTTTATATGAAGGTGTCCAAAAGACTTTTAGAGAAAA

GTCACCTGGTCAACAAAAATTGATTAATTTCTTTTTCGGTATCT

CACAAAAGTACATATTGGCAAAGAGAATCGCCAACAACTTGTC

TTTAAACCATTTGCACGCCTCAGCTATTGCAAGATTGGTAGCTA

GATGTCAAGCATTGGTTTTATCTCCATTGCATTATTTGGGTGAC

AAAATCGTATACCACAAGGTTAGACAAGCCGCTGGTGGTAGAT

TGGAAACTTTAATTTCTGGTGGTGGTGCCTTGGCTAGACATTTG

GATGACTTCTATGAAATCACCTCAATTCCTGTCTTAGTAGGTTA

CGGTTTAACAGAAACCGCCCCAGTCACAAATGCTAGAGTACAT

AAGCACAACTTAAGATATTCCAGTGGTAGACCTATCCCTTTTAC

TGAAATCAGAATCGTTGATATGGAAACTAAGGAAGACTTGCCA

CCTGAAACACAAGGTTTGGTCTTAATTAGAGGTCCTCAAGTAA

TGCAAGGTTATTACAATAAGCCAGAAGCAACTGCCAAGGTATT

AGATCAAGAAGGTTGGTTCGATTCCGGTGACTTGGGTTGGGTT

ACACCACAAAACGATTTGATATTAACTGGTAGAGCTAAAGACA

CAATCGTTTTATCTAATGGTGAAAACGTCGAACCTCAACCAATT

GAAGATGCATGCTTAAGATCCGCCTACATAGATCAAATCATGT

TGGTTGGTCAAGACCAAAAGAGTTTGGGTGCTTTAATCGTCCC

AAACTTCGATGCTTTACAAAAATGGGCAGAAACCAAGAACTTG

CAAATCACTGTTCCTGAACCATCTGCCTCTTCAGAGGGTATGCA

AGCATCTGGTTTGTATGATCCTCAAGTTGTCGGTTTGATGAGAT

CAGAATTACATAGAGAAGTTAGAGATAGACCAGGTTACAGAGC

AGATGACCAAATCAAAGATTTCAGATTCATTCCTGCTCCATTTT

CTTTAGAAAACGGTATGATGACTCAAACATTGAAATTGAAGAG

ACCTGTAGTCACCCAAACTTACCAACACTTGATAGACGAAATG

TTCTGA MmC ATGTCACCTATCACCAGAGAAGAAAGATTAGAAAGAAGAATA 168 AR CAAGACTTATACGCCAACGATCCTCAATTCGCCGCTGCCAAGC

CAGCAACAGCCATCACCGCTGCAATTGAAAGACCAGGTTTGCC

ATTGCCTCAAATCATCGAAACTGTTATGACAGGTTATGCTGATA

GACCTGCTTTGGCACAAAGATCAGTAGAATTTGTTACAGATGC

AGGTACTGGTCATACTACATTGAGATTGTTACCACACTTCGAAA

CTATCTCTTACGGTGAATTATGGGACAGAATTTCTGCCTTGGCT

GATGTTTTATCAACCGAACAAACTGTTAAACCTGGTGACAGAG

TCTGTTTGTTGGGTTTTAATTCTGTTGACTACGCAACTATAGAT

ATGACATTGGCCAGATTAGGTGCAGTAGCCGTTCCATTGCAAA

CCTCTGCCGCTATTACTCAATTACAACCAATAGTCGCTGAAACA

CAACCTACCATGATAGCAGCCTCTGTAGATGCTTTGGCAGACG

CCACTGAATTGGCTTTATCAGGTCAAACTGCAACAAGAGTCTT

AGTATTCGACCATCACAGACAAGTTGATGCCCATAGAGCTGCT

GTTGAATCCGCTAGAGAAAGATTGGCAGGTAGTGCCGTTGTCG

AAACTTTAGCTGAAGCAATAGCTAGAGGTGACGTTCCAAGAGG

TGCTTCTGCTGGTTCTGCTCCTGGTACAGACGTCTCCGATGACA

GTTTGGCATTGTTAATCTATACCTCTGGTTCAACTGGTGCCCCA

AAAGGTGCTATGTACCCTAGAAGAAATGTTGCTACATTTTGGA

GAAAGAGAACCTGGTTCGAAGGTGGTTACGAACCATCTATCAC

TTTGAACTTCATGCCTATGTCACATGTTATGGGTAGACAAATCT

TGTATGGTACTTTATGCAACGGTGGTACAGCATACTTTGTTGCC

AAGTCTGACTTGTCAACATTATTCGAAGATTTGGCTTTAGTCAG

ACCAACTGAATTAACATTCGTCCCTAGAGTATGGGATATGGTTT

TTGACGAATTTCAATCAGAAGTCGATAGAAGATTGGTAGATGG

TGCTGACAGAGTAGCTTTAGAAGCACAAGTTAAGGCAGAAATA

AGAAACGATGTTTTGGGTGGTAGATATACATCTGCCTTAACCG

GTTCTGCTCCAATATCAGACGAAATGAAGGCTTGGGTAGAAGA

ATTGTTAGATATGCATTTGGTTGAAGGTTACGGTTCAACTGAAG

CTGGTATGATATTAATCGACGGTGCAATTAGAAGACCAGCCGT

TTTGGATTATAAATTGGTTGATGTCCCTGACTTGGGTTACTTTTT

AACTGATAGACCACACCCTAGAGGTGAATTGTTGGTTAAGACA

GATTCTTTGTTCCCAGGTTATTACCAAAGAGCTGAAGTTACAGC

AGATGTCTTTGATGCTGACGGTTTCTATAGAACCGGTGACATTA

TGGCAGAAGTCGGTCCTGAACAATTCGTATACTTAGATAGAAG

AAACAACGTTTTGAAATTGTCTCAGGGTGAATTTGTAACTGTTT

CAAAGTTGGAAGCTGTATTCGGTGACTCTCCATTAGTTAGACA

AATATATATATACGGTAATTCAGCCAGAGCTTATTTGTTAGCAG

TCATAGTACCAACACAAGAAGCCTTGGATGCTGTTCCTGTCGA

AGAATTGAAAGCCAGATTGGGTGACTCCTTGCAAGAAGTTGCA

AAGGCCGCTGGTTTGCAAAGTTACGAAATCCCAAGAGATTTCA

TCATCGAAACCACTCCTTGGACCTTAGAAAACGGTTTGTTAACT

GGTATCAGAAAATTGGCTAGACCACAATTGAAAAAGCATTACG

GTGAATTGTTAGAACAAATATATACTGACTTGGCCCACGGTCA

AGCTGATGAATTGAGATC CTTAAGAC AAAGTGGTGC AGATGC C

CCAGTATTAGTTACAGTCTGTAGAGCAGCCGCTGCATTGTTAGG

TGGTTCCGCTAGTGATGTTCAACCTGACGCACATTTTACCGATT

TGGGTGGTGACTCTTTGTCAGCTTTATCTTTTACAAATTTGTTGC

ACGAAATCTTCGATATAGAAGTACCAGTTGGTGTCATTGTATCA CCTGCTAACGATTTGCAAGCATTGGCAGATTATGTTGAAGCCG

CTAGAAAACCAGGTTCTTCAAGACCTACTTTTGCTTCTGTTCAT

GGTGCATCAAATGGTCAAGTTACAGAAGTCCACGCTGGTGACT

TGTCTTTGGATAAGTTCATTGATGCAGCCACTTTGGCCGAAGCT

CCAAGATTACCTGCTGCAAACACTCAAGTAAGAACAGTTTTGT

TAACCGGTGCTACTGGTTTCTTGGGTAGATATTTGGCATTAGAA

TGGTTAGAAAGAATGGATTTGGTTGACGGTAAATTGATTTGCTT

AGTCAGAGCAAAGTCCGACACTGAAGCAAGAGCCAGATTGGA

TAAAACATTCGATAGTGGTGACCCAGAATTGTTAGCACATTAC

AGAGCTTTAGCAGGTGACCACTTGGAAGTTTTAGCCGGTGACA

AGGGTGAAGCTGACTTGGGTTTAGATAGACAAACATGGCAAAG

ATTGGCTGATACCGTAGACTTAATCGTTGATCCAGCCGCTTTAG

TCAACCATGTATTGCCATACTCCCAATTGTTCGGTCCTAACGCA

TTGGGTACTGCTGAATTGTTGAGATTGGCTTTGACTTCTAAAAT

TAAGCCTTACTCCTACACCAGTACTATCGGTGTTGCAGATCAAA

TTCCACCTTCAGCCTTCACTGAAGATGCTGACATAAGAGTCATC

TCCGCAACAAGAGCCGTAGATGACAGTTATGCTAATGGTTACT

CCAACAGTAAATGGGCAGGTGAAGTTTTGTTAAGAGAAGCCCA

TGATTTGTGTGGTTTACCAGTTGCTGTCTTTAGATGCGACATGA

TTTTGGCAGATACAACCTGGGCCGGTCAATTGAACGTTCCAGA

TATGTTCACAAGAATGATCTTGTCCTTAGCAGCCACCGGTATAG

CTCCTGGTAGTTTCTATGAATTGGCTGCTGATGGTGCTAGACAA

AGAGCACATTACGATGGTTTGCCAGTTGAGTTTATTGCCGAAG

CTATCTCCACCTTAGGTGCTCAAAGTCAAGATGGTTTCCATACT

TATCACGTAATGAATCCATACGATGACGGTATTGGTTTGGACG

AATTTGTTGATTGGTTAAACGAATCTGGTTGTCCTATTCAAAGA

ATAGCTGATTATGGTGACTGGTTACAAAGATTCGAAACTGCTTT

GAGAGCATTACCAGATAGACAAAGACATTCCAGTTTGTTACCT

TTGTTACACAATTACAGACAACCAGAAAGACCTGTCAGAGGTT

CTATTGCTCCTACAGATAGATTCAGAGCCGCTGTACAAGAAGC

AAAAATAGGTCCAGATAAGGACATCCCTCATGTTGGTGCTCCT

ATTATCGTAAAGTATGTATCAGATTTGAGATTGTTGGGTTTGTT

GTAA

Fdx ATGCCAAAGATTGTTATTTTGCCTCATCAGGATCTCTGTCCTGA 169

TGGCGCTGTTCTGGAAGCTAATAGCGGTGAAACCATTCTCGAC

GCAGCGCTGCGTAACGGTATCGAGATTGAACACGCCTGTGAAA

AATCCTGTGCTTGCACCACCTGCCACTGCATCGTTCGTGAAGGT

TTTGACTCACTGCCGGAAAGCTCAGAGCAGGAAGACGACATGC

TGGACAAAGCCTGGGGACTGGAGCCGGAAAGCCGTTTAAGCTG

CCAGGCGCGCGTCACCGACGAAGATTTAGTGGTTGAAATCCCG

CGTTACACTATCAACCATGCGCGTGAGCATTAA Fpr ATGGCTGATTGGGTAACAGGCAAAGTCACTAAAGTGCAGAACT 170

GGACCGACGCCCTGTTTAGTCTCACCGTTCACGCCCCCGTGCTT

CCGTTTACCGCCGGGCAATTTACCAAGCTTGGCCTTGAAATCGA

CGGCGAACGCGTCCAGCGCGCCTACTCCTATGTAAACTCGCCC

GATAATCCCGATCTGGAGTTTTACCTGGTCACCGTCCCCGATGG

CAAATTAAGCCCACGACTGGCGGCACTGAAACCAGGCGATGAA

GTGCAGGTGGTTAGCGAAGCGGCAGGATTCTTTGTGCTCGATG

AAGTGCCGCACTGCGAAACGCTATGGATGCTGGCAACCGGTAC

AGCGATTGGCCCTTATTTATCGATTCTGCAACTAGGTAAAGATT

TAGATCGCTTCAAAAATCTGGTCCTGGTGCACGCCGCACGTTAT

GCCGCCGACTTAAGCTATTTGCCACTGATGCAGGAACTGGAAA

AACGCTACGAAGGAAAACTGCGCATTCAGACGGTGGTCAGTCG

GGAAACGGCAGCGGGGTCGCTCACCGGACGGATACCGGCATTA

ATTGAAAGTGGGGAACTGGAAAGCACGATTGGCCTGCCGATGA

ATAAAGAAACCAGCCATGTGATGCTGTGCGGCAATCCACAGAT

GGTGCGCGATACACAACAGTTGCTGAAAGAGACCCGGCAGATG

ACGAAACATTTACGTCGCCGACCGGGCCATATGACAGCGGAGC

ATTACTGGTAA

CYP4 ATGGACTCCGCCAACAACTCTACAGCCGGTCCTGCCACAGTAT 171 G2 TGAATCCTATCTGGACAGCATTATTAGGTATTGCCGTCGTCGTC

TCATTGTACGAAATTTGGTTGAGAAACACTAGAAAGTACAAAT

TGACAGCAAATATGCCAAACCCACCTATGTTGCCTTTAATTGGT

AATGGTCATTTGGTTGCCCACTTAACAAACGCCGAAATTTTGGC

TAGAGGTATAGGTTATATGCAAACCTACGGTGGTGCCATGAGA

GGTTTCTTGGGTCCAATGTTAGTTGTCTTCTTGTGGAATGCTCCT

GATATCGAATTGATCTTAAGTACTCATACACACTTAGAAAAGT

CTATCGAATACAGATTTTTCAAACCTTGGTTTGGTGACGGTTTG

TTAATCAGTAACGGTCATCACTGGCAACATCACAGAAAGATGA

TAGCTCCAACTTTCCATCAATCCATCTTGAAAAGTTTTGTTCCT

GCTTTCGTCCAACACTCTAAAAAGGTAGTTGAAAGAATGGCAA

AGGAATTGGGTAAAGAATTTGATGTCCATGACTACATGTCACA

AACTACAGTAGAAATTTTGTTATCCACAGCTATGGGTGTTAAG

AAAGTTCCAGAAGATAATAAGTCATTAGAATACGCTAAAGCAG

TCGTAGATATGTGTGACATCATCCATAAGAGACAATTGAAGTT

TTTCTATAGAATGGATGCATTGTACAACTTATCTTCAATGTCCG

AAAAGGGTAAAAAGATGATGGATATCATCTTGGGTATGACAAG

AAAGGTTGTCACCGAAAGACAACAAAACTTCAACGCAGAAAG

TAGAGCCATCGTTGAAGAAGATGACGAAATTTCTAAGCAAAAG

CAACAAGCTAAAAAGAAAGAAGGTTTGAGAGATGACTTGGAT

GACATTGATGAAAATGACGTTGGTGCCAAGAAAAGATTGGCTT

TGTTAGACGCCATGATGGCTATGTCAAAGAATCCAGATGTTGA

ATGGACCGATAAAGACGTAATGGACGAAGTTAACACTATAATG

TTCGAAGGTCATGATACCACTTCCGCTGGTTCCAGTTTCGTTTT

GTGTATGTTGGGTATCTATAAGGATATCCAAGAAAAGGTCTTG

GCTGAACAAAAGGCAATCTTCGGTGACAATTTCTTGAGAGACT

GCACCTTCGCTGATACTATGGAAATGAAGTATTTGGAAAGAGT

TATCATGGAAACTTTGAGATTGTACCCACCTGTCCCATTAATTG

CAAGAAGAGCCGAATTTGATGTAAAGTTGGCATCTGGTCCATA TACAATTCCTAAAGGTACAACCGTAGTTATAGCTCAATTTGCAG

TTCATAGAAATCCTCAATACTTCCCAAACCCTGAAAAATTTGAT

CCAGACAATTTCTTGCCTGAAAGAATGGCTAACAGACACTACT

ACTCTTTTATTCCATTCTCAGCAGGTCCTAGATCCTGCGTTGGT

AGAAAGTACGCCATGTTGAAGTTAAAGGTCTTGTTATCTACTAT

CATCAGAAATTACTCTGTACAATCAAACCAACAAGAAAAGGAC

TTCAAATTACAAGCAGATATTATATTGAAAATAGAAAATGGTT

TTAATATAATGTTGAATAGAAGACCTGAAGCAATGAAGGCAAT

GTAA

MdCP ATGAGTGCCGAACACGTTGAAGAAGTAGTCAGTGAAGAACCAT 172 R TTTTAGGTACATTGGATATTGCCTTATTAGTAGTATTATTAGTC

GGTGCCACTTGGTACTTCATGAGATCAAGAAAGAAAGAAGAAG

CTCCTATAAGATCATACTCAATCCAACCAACTACAGTCTCCACA

GTAAGTACCACTGAAAATTCCTTCATTAAAAAGTTGAAAGCAT

CTGGTAGATCATTAGTTGTCTTTTATGGTTCACAAACTGGTACA

GCTGAAGAATTTGCAGGTAGATTGGCCAAGGAAGGTTTAAGAT

ACAGAATGAAGGGTATGGTTGCTGACCCTGAAGAATGTGATAT

GGAAGAATTGTTACAAATGAAGGATATCCCAAATTCTTTGGCC

GTCTTTTGCTTAGCTACCTATGGTGAAGGTGACCCAACTGATAA

CGCTATGGAATTTTACGAATGGATTACAAACGGTGAAGTCGAT

TTGACCGGTTTAAATTATGCCGTATTTGGTTTGGGTAACAAAAC

TTATGAACATTACAATAAGGTTGCTATCTATGTCGATAAGAGAT

TGGAAGAATTAGGTGCAACAAGAGTTTTCGAATTGGGTTTAGG

TGACGACGATGCAAACATCGAAGACGATTTCATCACCTGGAAA

GACAGATTCTGGCCATCCGTTTGTGATTTCTTTGGTATTGAAGG

TAGTGGTGAAGAAGTCTTGATGAGACAATTCAGATTGTTAGAA

CAACCTGACGTACAACCAGATAGAATCTATACAGGTGAAATAG

CTAGATTGCATTCTATGCAAAACCAAAGACCACCTTTTGATGCT

AAGAATCCTTTCTTGGCATCAGTCATTGTAAACAGAGAATTAC

ACAAAGGTGGTGGTAGATCATGCATGCACATCGAATTGGACAT

TGATGGTTCAAAGATGAGATATGACGCAGGTGACCATATCGCC

ATGTACCCAATTAATGATAAAATCTTAGTTGAAAAATTGGGTA

AATTGTGTGACGCTAATTTGGATACTGTCTTTTCTTTAATCAAC

ACCGACACTGATTCTTCTAAGAAACACCCATTCCCTTGCCCAAC

AACCTATAGAACCGCATTGACTCATTACTTAGAAATCACAGCC

ATTCCTAGAACCCACATATTGAAGGAATTAGCAGAATATTGTT

CCGACGAAAAGGATAAGGAATTTTTGAGAAACATGGCCAGTAT

TACACCAGAGGGTAAAGAAAAGTACCAAAACTGGATACAAAA

CTCCAGTAGAAACATCGTTCATATCTTGGAAGATATAAAATCTT GTAGACCACCTATAGATCATATTTGTGAATTGTTGCCTAGATTA

CAACCAAGATACTACTCTATCTCTTCATCCAGTAAGTTGTATCC

TACTAACGTTCATATTACAGCTGTTTTAGTCCAATACGAAACAC

CAACCGGTAGAGTAAATAAGGGTGTTGCAACTTCTTACATGAA

GGAAAAGAACCCTTCAGTTGGTGAAGTAAAGGTTCCAGTCTTT

ATAAGAAAGTCCCAATTCAGATTGCCTACTAAGAGTGAAATCC

CAATTATAATGGTTGGTCCTGGTACAGGTTTAGCACCTTTTAGA

GGTTTCATTCAAGAAAGACAATTCTTGAGAGACGGTGGTAAAG

TAGTTGGTGACACAATCTTGTACTTCGGTTGTAGAAAGAAAGA

CGAAGATTTCATCTATAGAGAAGAATTAGAACAATACGTTCAA

AACGGTACTTTGACATTGAAGACCGCCTTTTCAAGAGATCAAC

AAGAAAAGATATATGTAACTCATTTGATCGAACAAGACGCTGA

TTTGATTTGGAAAGTTATAGGTGAACAAAAGGGTCACTTCTAC

ATTTGCGGTGACGCTAAGAACATGGCAGTAGATGTTAGAAACA

TCTTGGTCAAAATTTTATCTACTAAGGGTAACATGAACGAATCA

GATGCTGTACAATACATTAAGAAAATGGAAGCCCAAAAGAGAT

ACTCCGCTGATGTTTGGAGTTAA

FacoA ATGAATTATTTCTTGACAGGTGGTACAGGTTTTATCGGTAGATT 173 R CTTGGTTGAAAAGTTGTTAGCCAGAGGTGGTACAGTTTATGTTT

TAGTTAGAGAACAATCTCAGGATAAGTTGGAAAGATTGAGAGA

AAGATGGGGTGCCGATGACAAACAAGTCAAGGCTGTAATAGGT

GACTTGACATCTAAAAATTTGGGTATCGATGCTAAGACCTTGA

AGTCTTTAAAGGGTAACATCGATCATGTATTCCACTTAGCTGCT

GTTTATGATATGGGTGCCGACGAAGAAGCTCAAGCCGCTACTA

ATATTGAAGGTACAAGAGCAGCCGTCCAAGCTGCTGAAGCTAT

GGGTGCTAAACATTTCCATCACGTTTCTTCAATCGCTGCTGCTG

GTTTGTTCAAGGGTATTTTTAGAGAAGACATGTTTGAAGAAGCT

GAAAAATTGGATCATCCATATTTGAGAACTAAGCACGAAAGTG

AAAAAGTTGTCAGAGAAGAATGTAAAGTTCCTTTTAGAATCTA

CAGACCTGGTATGGTTATTGGTCATTCTGAAACCGGTGAAATG

GATAAAGTTGACGGTCCATACTACTTTTTCAAGATGATCCAAA

AGATTAGACACGCTTTGCCACAATGGGTTCCTACTATCGGTATT

GAAGGTGGTAGATTAAACATCGTACCTGTTGATTTTGTAGTTGA

TGCATTGGACCATATTGCCCACTTAGAAGGTGAAGATGGTAAT

TGTTTCCATTTGGTCGATTCTGACCCATACAAAGTAGGTGAAAT

TTTAAACATATTTTGCGAAGCAGGTCACGCCCCTAGAATGGGT

ATGAGAATCGATTCAAGAATGTTCGGTTTCATTCCACCTTTTAT

AAGACAATCTATTAAAAATTTGCCACCTGTTAAGAGAATTACT

GGTGCTTTGTTAGATGACATGGGTATTCCACCTTCTGTTATGTC

ATTCATAAACTACCCAACCAGATTTGACACTAGAGAATTGGAA

AGAGTTTTGAAGGGTACAGATATAGAAGTCCCAAGATTACCTT

CTTATGCTCCAGTTATATGGGATTACTGGGAAAGAAACTTAGA TCCAGATTTGTTTAAAGATAGAACATTGAAGGGTACTGTAGAG

GGTAAAGTTTGTGTCGTAACAGGTGCTACCTCCGGTATTGGTTT

GGCTACAGCAGAAAAATTGGCCGAAGCTGGTGCAATCTTGGTT

ATTGGTGCAAGAACTAAGGAAACATTGGATGAAGTTGCCGCTA

GTTTAGAAGCAAAAGGTGGTAATGTCCATGCCTATCAATGTGA

TTTCTCTGACATGGATGACTGCGATAGATTCGTTAAGACTGTCT

TGGATAATCATGGTCACGTTGATGTATTAGTTAATAACGCTGGT

AGATCCATAAGAAGAAGTTTGGCATTATCTTTTGATAGATTCCA

TGACTTCGAAAGAACAATGCAATTGAACTACTTCGGTTCAGTT

AGATTGATTATGGGTTTTGCCCCAGCTATGTTGGAAAGAAGAA

GAGGTCATGTTGTCAATATATCCAGTATCGGTGTATTAACAAAC

GCTCCTAGATTCTCAGCATACGTTTCTTCAAAATCAGCTTTGGA

CGCATTTTCCAGATGCGCAGCCGCTGAATGGTCCGATAGAAAC

GTCACCTTTACTACAATTAACATGCCATTGGTAAAGACCCCAAT

GATTGCTCCTACTAAAATCTATGATTCTGTTCCAACCTTGACTC

CTGACGAAGCAGCCCAAATGGTTGCAGATGCCATAGTCTACAG

ACCAAAGAGAATCGCTACTAGATTGGGTGTCTTCGCACAAGTA

TTGCATGCTTTGGCACCTAAGATGGGTGAAATCATCATGAACA

CAGGTTACAGAATGTTTCCAGATTCACCAGCTGCTGCTGGTTCT

AAGAGTGGTGAAAAACCTAAGGTTTCCACAGAACAAGTAGCAT

TTGCCGCCATTATGAGAGGTATCTATTGGTAA

RtAC ATGCCATTCTCTGGCGAGGCGAAGGCGGTCAACGGATCGCACT 174 CI CGGTCGACGAGGCGCCGAAGAACCCCAAGTACGACCATGGGC

GGGTCGTAAAGTACCTCGGCGGCAACTCGCTCGAATCTGCGCC

CCCTTCCAAGGTCGCCGACTGGGTCAGGGAGCGTGGTGGACAC

ACCGTCATCACAAAGATCCTCATCGCCAACAATGGTATCGCCG

CAGTCAAGGAGATCCGCTCGGTGCGCAAGTGGGCGTACGAGAC

GTTCGGAAGCGAGCGCGCGATCGAGTTTACCGTCATGGCGACC

CCGGAGGACCTCAAGGTCAACGCAGACTACATCCGCATGGCCG

ATCAGTACGTCGAGGTTCCCGGTGGAACCAACAACAACAACTA

CGCCAACGTCGATGTCATCGTCGATGTTGCCGAGCGCGCAGGC

GTCCACGCCGTCTGGGCAGGATGGGGCCACGCCTCCGAGAACC

CCCGCCTTCCCGAGTCGCTCGCCGCCTCGAAGCACAAGATCGT

CTTCATCGGTCCTCCCGGCTCCGCCATGCGCTCGCTCGGAGACA

AGATCTCGTCGACCATCGTCGCGCAGCACGCCCAGGTTCCGTG

CATGGACTGGTCCGGCCAGGGCGTCGACCAAGTCACCCAGTCG

CCCGAGGGCTACGTTACTGTCGCCGACGACGTCTACCAGCAGG

CCTGTGTGCACGACGCCGACGAGGGTCTCGCCCGCGCGTCGAG

GATCGGATACCCCGTCATGATCAAGGCGTCCGAGGGAGGAGGA

GGAAAGGGTATTCGCAAGGTCGAGAAGGAGCAGGACTTTAAG

CAGGCCTTCCAGGCTGTCCTCACCGAGGTTCCCGGCTCGCCCGT

CTTTATCATGAAGCTCGCCGGCGCAGCTCGCCACCTCGAGGTCC

AGGTTCTCGCGGACCAGTACGGCAACGCCATCTCGCTCTTCGGC

CGTGACTGCTCGGTTCAGCGTCGCCACCAGAAGATCATCGAAG

AGGCGCCCGTCACCATCGCCAAGCCCGACACGTTCGAGCAGAT

GGAAAAGTCGGCCGTCCGCCTTGCCAAGCTCGTCGGCTACGTC

TCGGCGGGTACCGTCGAGTTCCTCTACTCGGCTGCCGACGACA

AGTTTGCCTTCCTCGAGCTCAACCCGCGTCTCCAGGTCGAGCAC

CCGACCACCGAGATGGTTTCGGGCGTCAACCTTCCCGCCGCCC

AGCTCCAGGTCGCTATGGGTGTTCCCCTCCATCGCATCCGCGAC

ATCCGCACGCTCTACGGCAAGGCACCCAACGGCAGCAGCGAGA

TCGATTTCGACTTCGAGAACCCCGAGTCGGCCAAGACGCAGCG

CAAGCCCTCGCCGAAGGGTCACGTCGTTGCCGTACGTATCACG

GCTGAGAACCCTGACGCCGGCTTCAAGCCGTCCATGGGTACTC

TCCAAGAGCTCAACTTCCGCTCGAGCACGAACGTCTGGGGTTA

CTTCTCCGTCGGCAGCGCCGGTGGACTGCACGAGTTTGCCGACT

CGCAGTTCGGCCACATCTTTGCGTACGGCTCGGACCGTTCCGAG

TCGCGCAAGAACATGGTCGTCGCGCTCAAGGAGCTCTCGATTC

GCGGTGACTTCCGCACGACCGTCGAGTACCTCATCAAGCTTCTC

GAGACGGACGCGTTCGAGCAGAACACGATCACGACCGCGTGG

CTCGACAGCCTCATCTCGGCTCGCCTGACCGCCGAGAGGCCCG

ACACGACTCTCGCCATCATCTGCGGCGCCGTTACCAAGGCCCA

CCTCGCTTCCGAGGCCAACATCGCCGAGTACAAGCGCATCCTC

GAGAAGGGTCAGAGCCCCGCCAAGGAGCTCCTCGCCACCGTCG

TCCCGCTCGAGTTCGTCCTCGAGGACGTCAAGTACCGCGCGAC

CGCCTCGCGCTCGTCGCCTTCGAGCTGGTCCATCTACGTCAACG

GCTCGAACGTCTCCGTCGGCATCCGCCCTCTCGCCGACGGCGGT

CTCCTCATCCTCCTTGACGGCCGCTCGTACACCTGCTACGCCAA

GGAGGAGGTCGGCGCGCTCCGCCTCTCGATCGACTCGAGGACC

GTCCTCATTGCTCAGGAGAACGACCCCACCCAGCTTCGCTCGCC TTCACCCGGCAAGCTCGTCCGCTACTTCATCGAGTCCGGCGAGC

ACATCTCGAAGGGCGAGGCGTACGCTGAGATCGAGGTCATGAA

GATGATCATGCCCCTCATCGCTGCCGAGGACGGTATCGCGCAA

TTCATCAAGCAGCCGGGAGCGACGCTCGAGGCCGGCGACATCC

TCGGTATCTTGTCGCTCGACGACCCGAGCCGCGTCCACCACGCC

AAGCCGTTCGATGGCCAGCTTCCCGCCCTTGGCTTGCCCTCCAT

CGTCGGCAACAAGCCGCACCAGCGCTTCGCCTACCTCAAAGAC

GTGCTCTCAAACATCCTCATGGGCTACGACAACCAGGCCGTCA

TGCAGTCGAGCATCAAGGAGCTCATCTCGGTTCTTCGCAACCCC

GAGCTCCCCTACGGCGAGGCCAACGCTGTCCTCTCGACGCTTTC

GGGTCGCATCCCCGCCAAGCTCGAGCAGACCCTCCGCCAGTAC

ATCGACCAGGCTCACGAGTCTGGCGCCGAGTTCCCGTCCGCCA

AGTGCCGCAAGGCGATCGACACGACCCTTGAGCAGCTCCGCCC

CGCCGAGGCGCAGACTGTCCGCAACTTCCTCGTCGCGTTCGAC

GACATCGTCTACCGCTACCGCTCGGGCCTCAAGCACCACGAGT

GGTCAACGCTCGCCGGCATCTTTGCCGCGTACGCCGAGACGGA

GAAGCCGTTCAGCGGCAAGGACGGCGACGTCGTCCTCGAGCTC

CGCGACGCCCACCGCGACTCGCTCGACTCGGTCGTCAAGATCG

TTCTCTCGCACTACAAGGCTGCCTCGAAGAACTCGCTTGTCCTT

GCGCTCCTCGACATCGTCAAGGACTCGGACGCGGTTCCGCTCA

TCGAGCAGGTCGTCAGCCCTGCGCTCAAGGACCTCGCCGACCT

CGACTCGAAGGCCACGACTAAGGTCGCCCTGAAGGCCCGCGAG

GTGCTCATCCACATCCAGCTCCCCTCGCTCGACGAGCGCCTCGG

ACAGCTCGAGCAGATTCTCAAGGCCTCGGTGACGCCCACCGTT

TACGGCGAGCCCGGCCACGACCGCACTCCTCGCGGTGAAGTCC

TTAAGGACGTCATCGACTCGCGCTTCACCGTCTTTGACGTTCTC

CCGAGCTTCTTCCAGCACCAGGACCACTGGGTCTCGCTCGCCGC

GCTCGACACCTACGTCCGCCGCGCCTACCGCTCGTACAACCTCC

TCAACATCGAGCACATCGAGGCCGATGCCGCCGAGGACGAGCC

CGCGACGGTTGCCTGGTCGTTCCGCATGCGCAAGGCTGCGTCC

GAGTCTGAGCCGCCCACGCCCACGACCGGCCTCACGTCGCAGC

GCACCGCCTCGTACTCGGACTTGACGTTCCTCCTCAACAACGCC

CAGTCCGAGCCGATCCGCTACGGCGCGATGTTCTCGGTCCGCTC

GCTCGACCGCTTCCGCCAGGAGCTCGGTACCGTCCTCCGACACT

TCCCCGACTCGAACAAGGGCAAGCTCCAGCAGCAGCCTGCCGC

GTCGTCGAGCCAGGAGCAGTGGAACGTCATCAACGTCGCGCTC

ACGGTCCCCGCCAGCGCGCAGGTCGACGAGGACGCTCTCCGCG

CCGACTTTGCCGCTCACGTGAACGCGATGAGCGCCGAGATCGA

CGCTCGCGGCATGCGCCGCCTCACCCTCCTCATCTGCCGCGAGG

GCCAGTACCCGTCCTACTACACCGTCCGCAAGCAGGACGGCAC

CTGGAAGGAGCTCGAGACGATCCGCGACATCGAGCCCGCCCTC

GCCTTCCAGCTCGAGTTGGGCCGCCTCTCCAACTTCCACCTCGA

GCCGTGCCCCGTTGAGAACCGCCAGGTCCACGTCTACTACGCG

ACCGCCAAGGGCAACTCGTCCGACTGCCGCTTCTTCGTCCGCGC

ACTCGTCCGCCCTGGCCGTCTCCGCGGTAACATGAAGACGGCC

GACTACCTCGTCTCCGAGGCTGACCGCCTCGTCACCGATGTCCT

CGACTCGCTCGAGGTCGCCAGCTCGCAGCGCCGCGCTGCCGAC

GGCAACCACATCTCGCTCAACTTCCTGTACTCTCTCCGTCTCGA

CTTTGACGAGGTCCAGGCTGCCCTCGCCGGCTTCATCGACCGCC

ACGGCAAGCGCTTCTGGCGTCTCCGCGTCACCGGCGCCGAGAT CCGCATCGTCCTCGAGGACGCGCAGGGCAACATTCAGCCCATC

CGCGCCATCATCGAGAACGTCTCGGGTTTCGTCGTCAAGTACG

AGGCGTACCGCGAGGTCACGACCGACAAGGGCCAGGTCATCCT

CAAGTCGATCGGTCCGCAGGGCGCGTTGCACCTTCAGCCGGTC

AACTTCCCCTACCCGACCAAGGAGTGGCTTCAGCCGAAGCGCT

ACAAGGCCCACGTCGTCGGCACGACGTACGTCTACGACTTCCC

CGACCTTTTCCGCCAGGCAATCCGCAAGCAGTGGAAGGCGGCC

GGCAAGACTGCGCCCGCCGAGCTCCTCGTCGCCAAGGAGCTCG

TCCTCGACGAGTTCGGCAAGCCTCAGGAGGTCGCCCGCCCGCC

TGGCACCAACAATATCGGCATGGTCGGCTGGATCTACACGATC

TTCACGCCCGAATACCCCTCTGGCCGCCGCGTCGTCGTCATCGC

GAACGACATCACGTTCAAGATTGGTTCGTTCGGCCCGGAGGAG

GACCGCTACTTCTTCGCCGTCACGCAGCTCGCGCGCCAACTTGG

CTTGCCGCGCGTCTACCTCTCGGCCAACTCGGGTGCTCGTCTCG

GCATTGCCGAGGAGCTCGTCGACTTGTTCAGCGTCGCGTGGGT

CGACAGCTCGCGGCCGGAGAAGGGCTTCAAGTACCTCTACCTA

ACCGCCGAGAAGCTCGGCGAGCTCAAGAACAAGGGCGAGAAG

AGCGTCATCACGAAGCGCATCGAGGACGAGGGCGAGACGCGC

TACCAGATCACCGACATCATCGGCTTGCAGGAGGGTCTCGGTG

TCGAGTCGCTCAAGGGCTCTGGCCTCATCGCCGGTGAGACGTC

GCGCGCGTACGACGACATCTTCACGATCACGCTCGTCACCGCC

CGCTCGGTCGGTATCGGTGCGTACCTCGTCCGCCTCGGCCAGCG

TGCCGTCCAGGTCGAGGGCCAGCCGATCATCCTCACCGGTGCC

GGCGCGCTCAACAAGGTCCTCGGTCGCGAGGTGTACTCGTCCA

ACTTGCAGCTCGGCGGCACGCAGATCATGTACAAGAACGGTGT

CTCGCACTTGACGGCCGCCAACGACCTCGAGGGTGTCCTCAGC

ATCGTCCAGTGGCTCGCCTTCGTCCCCGAGCACCGCGGCGCGC

CTCTCCCGATCATGCCTTCGCCCGTCGACCCGTGGGACCGCTCG

ATCGACTACACGCCCATCAAGGGCGCGTACGACCCGCGCTGGT

TCCTCGCCGGCAAGACGGACGAGGCCGACGGTCGCTGGCTCTC

TGGCTTCTTCGACAAGGGCTCGTTCCAGGAGACGCTCTCGGGCT

GGGCGCAGACCGTCGTCGTCGGTCGCGCTCGCCTCGGCGGCAT

CCCCATGGGCGCCATCGCGGTCGAGACCCGCACCATCGAGCGC

GTCGTGCCCGCCGACCCTGCCAACCCTCTCTCGAACGAGCAGA

AGATCATGGAGGCCGGTCAGGTCTGGTATCCCAACAGCTCGTT

CAAGACGGGACAGGCGATCTTCGACTTCAACCGCGAGGGTCTC

CCGCTCATCATCTTCGCCAACTGGCGCGGCTTCTCGGGCGGCCA

GCAGGACATGTTCGACGAGGTCCTCAAGCGCGGTTCGCTCATT

GTCGACGGTCTCTCGGCGTACAAGCAGCCCGTCTTCGTCTACAT

CGTCCCGAACGGCGAACTTCGCGGCGGTGCTTGGGTCGTCCTC

GACCCGTCGATCAACGCCGAGGGCATGATGGAGATGTACGTCG

ACGAGACTGCTCGCGCCGGTGTCCTCGAGCCCGAGGGCATCGT

CGAGATCAAGCTCCGCAAGGACAAGCTCCTCGCCCTCATGGAC

CGCCTCGACCCGACCTACCACGCCCTCCGCGTCAAGTCGACCG

ACGCTTCGCTCTCGCCCGCCGACGCCGCGCAGGCCAAGACCGA

GCTCGCCGCGCGCGAGAAGCAGCTCATGCCGATCTACCAGCAG

GTCGCGCTCCAGTTCGCCGACTCGCACGACAAGGCCGGCCGCA

TCCTCAGCAAGGGCTGCGCGCGCGAGGCCCTCGAGTGGTCGAA

CGCTCGTCGCTACTTCTACGCCCGCCTCCGCCGCCGTCTCGCCG

AGGAGGCCGCCGTCAAGCGTCTCGGCGACGCCGACCCGACCCT CTCGCGCGACGAGCGCCTCGCCATCGTCCACGACGCCGTCGGC

CAGGGTGTCGACCTCAACAACGACCTCGCTGCTGCCGCCGCGT

TCGAGCAGGGCGCCGCCGCCATCACCGAGCGCGTCAAGCTCGC

GCGCGCGACGACCGTCGCCTCGACTCTCGCGCAGCTCGCGCAG

GACGACAAGGAGGCTTTCGCCGCCTCGCTCCAGCAGGTCCTCG

GCGACAAGCTCACCGCCGCCGACCTCGCCCGCATCCTCGCCTA

G

RtFAS ATGAACGGCCGAGCGACGCGGAGCGTGACTGGGACGTCGACG 175 1 CCGGTCCACACGGCGACGACCCGACCCCTCGTCCTCTTGCACCC

CTCGACCCAAACCCGCATCTCGCTGCACGTCCCCTCCACGTCGC

AGGAATGGATCGCCGCCGAAGTCGCGCGCGACACCTTCCAGGA

CTGGCTTCACGCTGCCGAGAAGAGCGGAAACCTCGTCGGATTC

GAGGCGGCCGAGCTTGACGACGAGCAGGCTGGCGAGGGCGAC

GACGAGAAGGAGCTCGTCCTCACCGCCTACTTCTTGAAGCACG

TTGCCGGCCTTCTCCCCTTCCCGTCGACAGCTACCTCCCCCGCC

ACCGCCGCCGTCCTCCTCGCCGCCTTCAACCACTTTGCGTCCGT

CTACCTCAGCGGAACCGATGTTCACACCCTCACTGCCTCGCTCG

CTGCTCCCGTCCGCGCTCTCGTCATCTCGTCCTTCTTCCTCGCCA

AGACCAAGCTCGAGGTCGAGGGACTCGGCAAGGTCTTGCCCAA

GCAGTCCGAGTCGGCGCTCCTGCAGAAGGCTGCGACCGGCCAG

GCAGAGGTCTTCGCTCTCTTCGGTGGTCAGGGAATGAACGAGG

TCTACTTTGACGAGCTCCAGACCCTCCACGACCTTTACACCCCG

CTGCTTACGCCCTTCCTCGCCCGCGCCTCCGAACACCTCGTCTC

TCTCGCTGCCGCCGAGCAGCACACCCTCCTTTACGACCACTCGC

TCGACGCCCTTGCCTGGCTGCAAGATCCCTCTACCCGCCCCGAA

GTCCCCTACCTCGCGACTTGCGCCGTCTCGCTCCCTCTCATCGG

TCTCACTCAGCTCTGCCAGTACGTCGTGTACGGCAAGGGCTCGT

CGCTCGGTCCCGCCGAGCTCGGCGCCAAGTTCAAGGGCGCGAC

CGGCCACTCGCAGGGTGTCGTCTCGGCTCTTGTCATCGCGCACG

AGTACCCTCCCGCGTCCAAGGACGGCAGCGACGCGTGGGAGCC

TTTCTACGAGCAGGCCCTTCGCGGTTTGACCGTCCTCTTCCAGA

TCGGTCTCCAGGGCACGCTCGCCTTCCCCTCCATCGCCATTTCG

CCCGCTCTCGAGTCGAGCTCGGTCGAGAATGGCGAGGGTGTCC

CGACTGCCATGCTTGCCGTCACCGGCCTCGACCTCAAGTCGCTC

GAGAAGAAGATCGCCGAGGTCAATGGGCACGTCAAGTCTGAG

GGCCGCGACGAGACCGTCTCGATCAGTCTCTACAACGGTGCGA

GGGCGTTCGTCGTCACTGGTGCGCCGAAGGACCTCGTCGGTCT

CGCCGACGGCCTTCGCAAGAACCGCGCGCCGGCCGGCAAGGAC

CAGTCGAAGATCCCGCACTCGAAGCGTCTCCCCGTCTTCTCGAT

GCGCTTCCTCCCCATCAACGTTCCCTACCACTCGCATCTCCTCC

AAGGCGCGACCGAGAAGGCGCTCGCGACGTTCTCGGCTGAGGA

GGCCGCCCACTGGGCGCCTTCATCGTTCACCTGCGCCGTCTACA

ACACCGAGGACGGCTCCGACATGCGCCAGCTCTCGGCTTCGTC

GGTTCTCGAGTCGGTCTTCCAGCAGATCTTCACCTCGCCCATTC

ACTGGGTCTCGCACGCCACCAACTTCCCCTCGTCCGCGACGCAC

GCCATCGATTTCGGCACGGGCGGCGCGAGCGGCATCGGTTCGC

TCTGCGCGCGCAACTGGGAGGGCCGCGGTATCCGCACGATTAT

GCTCGGCAACCGCGGCGAGGGCGTTGGTGCCGGCAAGGAGGCT

TGGGGCAAGAAGGTCCCGACCGAGGAGAAGTGGAACGAGCGC

TTCCACCCTCGCCTCGTCCGCACCAGCGACGGCAAGATCCACCT

CGACACGCCCTTCTCGCGCCTCCTCTCGAAGCCGCCCCTCATGG

TCGGTGGTATGACCCCGACGACCGTCAAGGCCGGCTTCGTCTC

GGCCGTTCTCCGCGCGGGCTACCACATCGAGCTCGCTGGCGGC

GGTCACTACAACGAGAAGGCTGTCCGTGCCAAGGTCGCCGAGA

TCCAGAAGCTCGTGAACAAGCCCGGCATGGGCATCACCCTCAA

CTCGCTCTACATCAACCAGCGCCAGTGGACGTTCCAGTTCCCGC TCTGGGCCAAGATGAAGCAGGAGGGCGAGCCCGTCGAGGGTCT

CTGTGTTGCTGCCGGTATTCCCTCAACCGAGAAGGCCAAGGAG

ATCATCGACACGCTCCGCGAGGCCGGCATCAAGCACGTCTCGT

TCAAGCCCGGTTCGGTCGACGGCATCCGCCAGGTCGTCAACAT

CGCCTCCGCCAACCCCGACTTCCCCATCATCCTCCAGTGGACTG

GTGGTCGCGCCGGCGGTCACCACTCGTGCGAGGACTTCCACGC

CCCGATCCTCGCGACGTACGCTTCGATCCGTCAGCACCCCAAC

ATCAAGCTCGTCGCCGGCTCTGGCTTCGGCTCGGCTGAGGGAT

GCTACCCTTACCTTTCGGGCGAGTGGTCGGAGAAGCAGTACGG

CGTCGCGCGCATGCCGTTCGACGGCTTCATGTTTGCTTCGTGGG

TCATGGTCGCCAAGGAGGCGCACACGAGCGAGTCGGTCAAGCA

GCTCATCGTCGACGCGCCTGGTGTCGAGGATGGCCAGTGGGAG

CAGACGTACGACAAGCCGACCGGCGGCATCCTCACCGTCAACT

CGGAGCTTGGCGAGCCGATCCACAAGGTCGCGACTCGTGGTGT

CAAGCTGTGGGCCGAGTTCGACAAGAAGGTCTTCTCGCTGTCG

AAGGAGAAGCAGCTCGCATGGCTCGCCGACAACAAGAAGTAC

GTTATCGACCGCCTCAACGCCGATTTCCAGAAGCCCTGGTTCCC

CGCCAAGGCCGACGGCTCTCCTTGCGACCTTGCCGACATGACC

TACGCCGAGGTCAACGCCCGCCTCGTCCGCCTCATGTACGTCGC

GCACGAGAAGCGCTGGATCGACCCGTCGCTCCGCAACCTCGTC

GGCGACTGGATCCGCCGTGTTGAGGAGCGTCTCTCGAACGTCA

ACGACTCGGGCATCAAGATCTCGGCACTCCAGTCGTACTCGGA

GCTGAACGAGCCTGAGGCGTTCCTCAAGCAGTTCCTCGCCCAG

TACCCGCAGGCCGAGGACCAGATCCTCGCCTCCGCCGACGTTT

CCTACTTCCTCGCCATCTCTCAACGCCCCGGACAGAAGCCCGTC

CCCTTCATCCCCGTCCTCGACGCCAACTTCAGCATCTGGTTCAA

GAAGGACTCGCTGTGGCAGGCCGAGGACATCGAGGCCGTCTTT

GACCAGGACCCGCAGCGTGTCTGCATCCTCCAGGGACCGGTCG

CCGCCAAGCACTGCACCTCGACGCAGACGCCCATCGCCGAGAT

GCTCGGCAACATCGAGCACCAGCTCGTCAAGAACGTCCTGGAC

GACTACTACGGCGGCGACGAGTCCCAGATCCCGACTATCGACT

ACCTCGCGCCCCCTCCCAAGCCGGTCGACGCCGGCGCTATCCTC

GCCGAGAACAACATCGCGCACTCGGTCGAGGAGCTCGCCGACG

GCGGCAAGAAGCATGTCTACTCGATCAACGGTGTCCTCCCGCC

GACGGGCGACTGGCATGCCGCACTCGCCGGCCCCAAGCTCGAC

TGGCTCCAGGCGTTCCTCTCCAACGTCTCGATTCAGGCGGGCGA

GCAGTCGATTCCTAACCCCGTCAAGAAGGTGCTGGCGCCGAGG

CACGGGCAGCGGGTCGAGCTCACCCTGAACAAGGACGGCCAG

CCCCTCAAGCTCGACGTCTTCGGCGGGCTCTGA

RtFAS ATGGTCGCGGCGCAGGACTTGCCGCTCGCGCTGAGCATCAGCT 176 2 TCGCGCCCGAGTCGTCGACCATCTCGATGACGCTGTTCAACCA

GCCCGAGGCGTCGAAACCCGCCCTCCCCCTCGAGCTCAAGTAC

AAGTACGACCCCTCGACGCCGTACGCCCCGATCCACGAGATCA

CCGAGGACCGTAATCAGAGGATCAAGCAGCACTACTGGGACCT

CTGGGGCCTCGGCAACAAGGCAGACCAGGGCATCTCGCAGCTC

AAGATCACCGACGAGTTCCAGGGCGACCTCGTCACCATCTCGG

CCGACGAGATCGAGGCGTTCTGCCGTGTTGTCGGCATCGAGGG

CGAGGCGTACAAGCGCAACCACAAGGCCGGCATGCAGGTCCC

GCTCGACTTCGCCATCAAGCTCGGCTGGAAGGCCATCATGAAG

CCGATCTTCCCCTCGACGATTGACGGCGACCTGCTCAAGCTCGT

CCACCTCTCGAACGGCTTCCGCGTCCTCCCCGACACGCCCACAC

TCCAGGTTGGCGACGTCGTGACGACCACGTCGCGCATCGAATC

AATCACGAACTCGGACACGGGCAAAACCGTCTCGGTTCGCGGC

GTCATCTCGCTCGTCTCGTCCGCCGACTCGAAGGGCAAGGACG

CCTCGACCGAGGACCGCATCCCGCTCATCGAGGTCACCTCGTC

CTTCTTCTACCGCGGCAAGTTCAGCGACTACGCCCAGACATTCT

CCCGCGTCGCCCACCCGACCTACTCTGTCCCGATCACCACGCCC

GAGGCCGTCGCCGTCCTCCAGTCCAAGGAGTGGTTCCAGTGGG

ACGACGACTCGAAGCCCCTCGAGGTCGGCACCAAGCTCCAGTT

CAAGGTCGAGTCGAACTATGTCTACGCCGACAAGTCGTCCTAC

GCGATGGCTACCGTCACCGGCGGCGCGTACGTCATCACCCCCG

AGCTCAAGCTCGCTGTCAAGGTTGCCACGGTCGACTACACGTC

CGAGGGCGAGGGCGTCATCCAGGGCGACCCGGTCATCGAGTAC

CTCAAGCGCCACGGCTCGGCCCTCGACCAGCCCATCATGCTCG

AGAACGGCGGCTATTCGCTCACCAAGGCCGGCCAGTGCACCTT

C AC GACGCC CGC GTCCAACCTC GACTACTC GCTC ACCTCGGGC

GACACGAACCCGATTCACACGAACCCGTACTTTGCCTCGCTCG

CCTACCTCCCCGGCACCATCACGCACGGCATGCACTCGTCGGC

CCGCACGCGCAAGTTTGTCGAGCAGGTCGCCGCAGACAACGTC

GGCGCGCGCGTCCGCAAGTACGAGGTCGGCTTCACGGCCATGT

GCCTCCCCTCGCGCAAGATGGAGGTCCGCCTTAAGCACGTCGG

CATGACCGCGGACGGAAACCGCCTCATCAAGGTCGAGACCGTC

GACGTCGAGGGCGGCAACGTCGTTCTCAGCGGAACCGCCGAGG

TCGCCCAGGCTCCCACCGCGTACGTCTTCACCGGTCAAGGTTCG

CAAGAGCCCGGCATGGGCATGGAGCTCTACGCCAACTCGCCCG

TCGCCCGCGCCGTCTGGGACGAGGCTGACCGCCACCTCGGCGA

GGTCTACGGCTTCTCCATCCTCGAGATTGTCCGTACGAACCCCA

AGGAAAAGACTGTGCACTTCGGCGGGTTGAAAGGCCAAGCAA

CCCGTCAGAAGTACATGGACATGTCGTACACAACGACTGACCA

TGAGGGCAACGTTAAGACTCTCCCGCTCTTCGGCGACATCGAC

CTCCGTACCTCACGCTACACGTTCTCGTCGCCGACCGGTCTCCT

CTACGCCACCCAGTTCGCCCAGATCGCCCTCGTCGTAACGGAG

AAGGCCGCCTTCGAGGACATGCGCGCCAAGGGTCTCGTTCAGA

AGGACTGCGTCTTTGCCGGTCACTCGCTCGGAGAGTACTCGGCT

CTCGCCTCGATCGCCGACATCCTCCCCATCTCGGCCCTCGTCGA

CGTCGTCTTCTACCGCGGTATCACCATGCAGCGCGCCGTCGAAC

GCGACCACCTCAACCGCTCGTCGTACGGAATGGTCGCCGTCAA

CCCGAGCCGCATCGGCAAGAGCTTTGGCGACGCCGCCCTCCGC GAGGTCGTCGACACCATCGCCCGCCGCGGAAACATCCTCATCG

AGGTCGTCAACTACAACGTCGAGGGACAGCAATACGTCGTCGC

CGGTCACCTCGTCGCCCTCCAATCCCTCACAAACGTCCTCAACT

TCCTCAAGATCCAGAAGATCGACCTCGCCAAGCTCACCGAGAC

GATGTCGATCGAGCAGGTCAAGGAGCACCTGTGCGAGATCGTC

GACGAGTGCGTCCAGAAGGCGCGCGACCTCCAGGCCAAGACG

GGCTTCATCACCCTCGAGCGCGGCTTTGCGACGATCCCGCTCCC

CGGTATCGACGTGCCGTTCCACTCGCGCTACCTCTGGGCGGGA

GTCATGCCGTTCCGCACTTACCTCTCGAAGAAGGTCAACCCGG

CGCACTTCAACGCCGACCTCCTCGTCGGCCGCTACATCCCCAAC

TTGACCGCCGTCCACTACGAGGTCTCGAAGGAGTACGCCGAAC

GCATCCACACCCAGACGTCGTCGCCGCGCCTCAACAAGATTCT

CAAGGCCTGGGACGAGGAGCGCTGGGGCGCACCCGAGAACCG

CAACAAGCTCGGCTACGCCATCCTCATCGAGCTCCTCGCGTACC

AGTTCGCCTCGCCCGTCCGCTGGATCGAGACGCAGGACATCCT

CTTCCGCGACTTCAAGTTTGAGCGCCTCGTCGAGCTTGGCCCGT

CGCCCACTCTCACCGGCATGGCTACGCGCACGCAGAAGCTCAA

GTACGACGCGCACGACTCGTCGGTCGGCATCAAGCGCTCGATC

TACTGCATCGCCAAGCACCAGAAGGAGATCTACTACCAGTTCG

ATGACGTTGCCGGCGAAGAGGCGCCCGCTCCTGCCGCAGTTGC

GCCTTCCGCTCCCGCTCCCAAGGCCGCCCCAGTCGCCGCCGCCC

CTCCCCCTCCCGCTCCTGTCGCTGCCGCGCCTGCCGCCGCCGTC

GCCGACGAGCCGCTCAAGGCTGTCGACACGCTCCGCATCATCA

TCGCGCAGAAGCTCAAGAAGCCCGTTGGCGAAGTCCCCCTCAC

CAAGTCGATCAAGGAGCTCGTCGGCGGCAAGTCGACCCTCCAG

AACGAGATTCTCGGCGACCTTCAAGGCGAGTTCAGCAGCGCGC

CTGAAAAGGGCGAGGAGATGCCTCTCCAGGAGCTCGGCGCGGC

CCTCCAGCAGGGCTACTCTGGCAAGCTCGGCAAGTACACCACC

GGCGTCATCTCGCGCATGATTGGCGCCAAGATGCCCGGCGGTT

TTGGTCTCTCCGCCGTCCAGGGTCACCTCGGCAAGACCTACGGC

CTCGGCGCCGGTCGCATCGATGGCGTCCTCCTCTTCGCCGTCAC

GCAGGAGCCGGCTAAGCGTCTCGCCAACGAGGGTGAGGCGAA

GGCTTGGGTCGACTCGGTCGCGCAAGGCTACGCCTCGATGGCT

GGCATCTCGCTCGCCGCCGGCGGTGGAGCTGCTGCTGCTGCCC

CCGCGATGGCGTTCGCCGCTCCGGCCGCAGCTGGCGGTGGAGC

GCCCGCTGCCGTCCCCGACGAGCCGCTCAAGGCGACCGACACG

CTTCGCGCCATCATCGCTCAGAAGCTCAAGAAGCAGATCCCCG

ACGTCCCCCTCACCAAGTCCATCAAGGACCTTGTCGGCGGCAA

GTCGACCCTGCAGAACGAGATCCTCGGCGACCTCCAGGGCGAG

TTCAGCAGTGCGCCCGAGAAGGGCGAGGAGATGCCGCTCCAGG

AGCTTGGCGCCGCACTCAACCAAGGCTACTCGGGCACGCTCGG

CAAGCACACGAGCGGTCTCGTCGCCCGCATGATGGGCGCCAAG

ATGCCCGGTGGCTTCGGTCTCTCGGCGGCGAAGGCGCACCTCT

CGAAGGCTCACGGTCTCGGGCCCGGCCGCACCGACGGCGCTCT

CCTCGTCGCGCTCACCAAGGAGCCCGAGAAACGTCTCGGTAGC

GAGGCCGACGCCAAGGCCTGGCTCGACGGCGTCGCTCAGGCGT

ACGCCTCGCAGGCTGGCATCACCCTCGGCGCTGGTGGAGGCGG

AGGCGGCGCGGCTGTCGGCGGCGCCGGCTTTATGATCAACACC

GAGCAGCTCGACAAGATGCAGGAGAAGCAGGACAACTTCGTCT

CGCAGCAGGTCGAGCTCTTCCTCCGCTACCTCGGCAAGGACTC GCGCGAGGGCCACCGCCTCGCCGACATGCAGAAGGCAGAGGT

CGCCAACCTCCAGGAGAAGCTCGACTCGATCGCTCGCGAGCAC

GGCGACGCCTATGTCCAGGGCATCCAGCCCGTCTTCGACCCGC

TCAAGGCCCGCCACTTCAACTCGTCGTGGAACTGGGTCCGTCA

GGACGCGCTCATGATGTGGATGGACATCCTCTTCGGCCGCCTC

ACCACCGTCGACCGCGACATCACCGCTCGCTGCCTTGTCATCAT

GAACCGCGCCGACCCTTCTCTCATCGACTACATGCAGTACACC

ATCGACAACACCCCCGTCGAGCGCGGCGAGCATTACGTCCTCG

CCAAGCAATTCGGCCAGCAGCTCCTCGACAACTGCCGCGAGAT

GATCGGCCAGGCTCCGCTCTACAAGGACGTCACCTTCCCGACC

GCGCCCAAGACGACCGTCAACGCCAAGGGCGACATCATCACCG

AGGAGGTCAACCGCCCCGGCGTCTCTCGCCTCGAGAAGTATGT

CGCCGAGATGGCTGCCGGCTCAAAGGTCACCGTCGCCAGCGTC

AACCTCGACAAGGTCCAGGAGCAGGTCGAGAAGCTGTACAAG

CTCGTCAAGTCGCAGCCGCAGATTTCGAAGCAGCACATGACGT

CGATCAAGTCGCTGTACGCTGAGGTCGTTCGCGGTCTCGGCAA

GGACGCCGGCCCTCCTCCGGTCCACAAGGCCGGCACTCGCGCC

CGCCGCCCCTCGAGCCAGTTCCTCCGTCCCGCAGCCGTCTCCGA

GGCGACTTTCCTCCCCGAGGACAAGGTGCCTCTCCTGCACCTCA

AGCGCAAGATCGGCAACGACTGGCAATACTCGAGCAAGCTCAC

GTCGCTCTACCTCGACATCCTCAAGGAGATTGCCACGTCGGGT

GTCACCTTCGAGCACAAGAACGCGCTCATGACCGGTGTCGGCA

AGGGCTCCATCGGTATCGAGATCGTCAAGGGTCTCCTCGCTGG

TGGCGCTCGCGTCGTCATCACGACCTCGCGCTACTCGCGCTCGA

CTGTCGAGTACTACCAGGCGATCTACCAGGAGGTCGGCTCGAA

GGGCTCGTCGCTCACCGTCGTCCCCTTCAACCAGGGCTCGAAG

CAGGATGTCGAGGCGCTCGTCGACTTCATTTATTCGAAGGATA

AGGGTCTCGGCATGGACCTCGACTACATCCTCCCCTTCGCCGCC

CTTCCCGAGAACGGCCGCGAGATCGACGGCATCGACGACCGCT

CCGAGCTCGCCCACCGCATCATGCTCACCAACCTCCTCCGCCTC

CTCGGTGCCGTCAAGTCGAAGAAGGCCGCCCTCAAGCTCACGA

CCCGCCCAACCGAGGTCGTCCTCCCGCTTTCGCCGAACCACGG

CCTCTTCGGCAACGACGGTCTCTACTCGGAGTCGAAGATCTCGC

TCGAGACGCTCTTCAACCGCTGGAGCTCGGAGAGCTGGGGCGA

GTACCTCTGCCTCGCTGGCGCTGTCATCGGATGGACGCGCGGT

ACCGGTCTCATGTCGGCGACGAACTCGGTCGCCGAAGGTATCG

AGGCGCAGGGTTGCAGGACGTTCTCCGCCAAGGAGATGGCCTT

CAACATTCTCGGCCTCATGCACCCGCTCGTCTTCGACGTCGCGC

AGATCGAGCCTGTCTGGGCCGACCTCAACGGTGGCATGGACAA

GCTCCCCGACCTTGCCAACCTCACGACCGAGATCCGCAAGAAG

CTCAACCTCACCGCGTCGACCCGCCGCGCCATCGCCAAGGACA

ACTCGTTCGACTACAAGGTCGCGCACGGCCCGGCGATGGAGCA

GATACACCAGCGGATCAACGTCGCCCCGCGCGCCAACTTCTCC

CTTCCCTTCCCCGAGCTCAAGCCGATCGATGCCAAGTCGGAGCT

CGCGAAGCTCCGTGGCCTCATCGACCTCGAGAAGGTCGTAGTC

ATGACCGGTTACGCCGAGGTCGGACCGTTCGGCTCGTCGCGCA

CGCGCTGGGAGATGGAGGCGAACGGCACCTTCTCCATCCAGGG

CACACTCGAGCTTGCGTACGTCATGGGCCTCATCAAGCACTTTG

AGGGTCGCCTCAAGGACGGCACGCTCTACGTCGGATGGGTCGA

CGCCAAGACGAACGAACCGCTGGACGACAAGGACGTCAAGGC TGCGTACGAGAAGCACATTCTCGCGCACACCGGCATCCGCCTC

ATCGAGCCGGAGATCTTCAACGGCTACGACCCGAAGCGCAAGG

GCTTCACGCAGGAGATCGAGATCCAGCACGACCTCGAGCCCAT

CGAGGCGTCCGAGGAGGACGCGGCTCGCTTCAAGCGCGAGCAC

GGCGCGCTCGTCGACGTCTACACCGAGGACGGCAGCAAGTTCT

TCGTCAAGTTCAAGAAGGGCGCCAAGCTGCACATTCCCAAGGC

TGTTGCCTTCGACCGCCTTGTCGCCGGACAGATCCCGACTGGCT

GGTCGCACAAGGCCTTCGGTATCCCCGACGACATTGCCTCGCA

GGTTGACCGCACCTCGCTGTGGGCGCTCGTCTCGGTCGCCGAG

GCGCTCATGATGGCCGGCATCACCGACCCGTATGAGCTCTACA

AGTGGATTCACCCGAGCGAGGTCGGTTCGTCGCTCGGATCCGG

CATGGGAGGCATCACGAGTATCTCGAAGATGTTCCGCGACCGC

CGCGAGGAGAAGGACGTCCAGAAGGACATCCTCCAGGAGACC

TTCATCAATACGGTCGCCGGATGGGTCAACCTCCTCCTTCTCTC

GTCATCCGGACCGATCAAGATCCCCGTCGGCGCCTGCGCGACT

GCCCTCCAGTCGGTCGAGATCGCCTGCGACACCATCCTCAGCG

GCAAGGCCAAGATCATGGTCTCGGGAGGCTACGACGACTTCTC

CGAGGAGGGCTCGTACGAGTTCGCAAACATGAAGGCGACCTCG

AACAGCGAGACCGAGTTCGCTGCCGGCCGCGAGCCGAACGAG

ATGTCGCGTCCGACGACCAGCACCCGTGCCGGCTTCATGGAGT

CGATGGGTTGCGGTGCTCAGGTCCTGATGTCGGCGAAGACGGC

CATCGAGATGGGCGCCACCATCTACGGCATCGTCGCCTACACC

GCGACCGCCACCGACAAGGCTGGTCGCTCGATTCCCGCCCCCG

GACGCGGTGTCATGGGTACCGCGCGCGAGATCACCTCCAAGTA

CCCCTCGCCCATCCTCGATGTCACCTACCGCCGCCGCCAGCTCG

AGTTCCGTCGCAAGCAGATCTCGCAGTGGCTCGAGAACGAGAC

CGAGCTCCTCAAGTTCGAGGTCTCCTCGCACGGACAGGCCACA

AAGCTCCCCGACGACTACGTCTCCGAGCGCCTCGCATCCATCG

AACGCGAAGCCAAGCGCCAGGAGGCCGAGGCTCTCGCGACGT

ACGGCATGCTCGCCGGCCAGGACCCGACCATCGCCCCGCTCCG

TCGCGCTCTCGCCGTTTGGGGTCTCACCATCGACGACGTTGGAG

TCGCCTCGTTCCACGGCACCTCGACCGTTGCCAACGACAAGAA

CGAGTCGAACGCGTACAACGAGCAGTTCCGTCACCTTGGCCGC

GCCAAGGGTAACGCCTGCCCCGTCATCGCTCAGAAGTGGCTCA

CCGGACACCCGAAGGGAGGTGCCGCCGCCTGGATGCTCAACGG

CTTGGCCCAGGTCATTCAGAGCGGTCTCGTTCCCGGCAACCGC

AACGCCGACAACATCGGCGAAGAGCTTCGCGCGTTCGAGTACC

TGCTCTACCCGTCCAAGTCGATCCAGACCGACGGCATCAAGGC

TGGTCTCCTCACCTCGTTCGGCTTCGGTCAAGTCGGTGGCCAGG

CTCTCATCGTTCACCCGAGTCTGCTCATCGGCGCGCTCGAGCCC

GCCCAGTTCGAGGCGTACAAGAAGCTCAACGACCAGCGCAAG

AAGTGGTCATACCGTCGCTTCAACGATTTCTTCACGAACGGCA

AGCTCGTCATTATCAAGGACGGCACGCCCTTCACGCCCGAGCA

GGAGAACACGACCCTCCTCAACCCGCTCGTCCGCGCCGTGCCC

GACAAGACTGGCTCGTACTCGATGCCGAAGGAGTTCCCTGCCA

CCGTCCCTCGCAGCAACAACGCCGAAGTCGCCAACAAGCTCGT

CAGCGCGGCTGTCGGCGGTGCTTTCGGCGTCGGCACGGACGTC

GAGCTGATCAGCGCCGTCCCGACCTCGGAGTCGTTCCTCGAGA

GGAACTTCACCCAGGACGAGATCGCCTACTGCAAGGCCGCACC

CGACTTCCGCGCTAGCCTCGCCGCGCGCTGGTCCGCCAAGGAG GCCACTTTCAAGGCTCTCAAGACCGAGTCGAAGGGCGCCGCCG

CCAGCATGCAGGACATCGAGGTCGTCTCCACGTCGCAGGGCCC

GACTATCAAGCTCCACGGCGAGGTCGAGAAGATCGCCCAGGCC

GCCGGCATCACGGCCTTCGAGGTCTCGCTCTCGCACTCGGAGG

ACGTCGCTTGCGCCGTCGTCATCGCCCAGAAGTAG

Acrl GGATCCAAAACAATGAATAAGAAGTTAGAAGCATTGTTTAGAGA 177

AAATGTCAAGGGTAAAGTCGCTTTAATCACTGGTGCCTCCTCAGG

TATCGGTTTAACTATCGCAAAAAGAATTGCTGCAGCCGGTGCCC

ATGTTTTGTTAGTCGCTAGAACTCAAGAAACATTGGAAGAAGTT

AAGGCTGCAATCGAACAACAAGGTGGTCAAGCATCTATATTCCC

ATGTGATTTGACAGACATGAATGCAATAGATCAATTATCCCAAC

AAATCATGGCCAGTGTAGATCATGTTGACTTTTTGATTAATAACG

CAGGTAGATCTATAAGAAGAGCCGTTCATGAATCATTTGATAGA

TTCCACGACTTCGAAAGAACAATGCAATTAAACTACTTCGGTGCT

GTCAGATTGGTATTGAACTTGTTGCCTCACATGATCAAGAGAAA

GAATGGTCAAATTATAAACATCTCTTCAATCGGTGTATTGGCCAA

CGCTACCAGATTCTCTGCTTATGTTGCATCAAAAGCCGCTTTAGA

TGCTTTTTCCAGATGCTTGAGTGCAGAAGTTTTGAAGCATAAGAT

CTCTATAACTTCAATCTATATGCCATTGGTCAGAACACCAATGAT

CGCACCTACCAAAATCTATAAGTACGTTCCAACATTGTCTCCTGA

AGAAGCAGCCGATTTGATAGTTTATGCTATCGTCAAGAGACCTA

CCAGAATTGCCACTCACTTGGGTAGATTAGCTTCCATTACCTACG

CAATAGCCCCAGACATAAACAACATCTTGATGTCTATTGGTTTTA

ATTTGTTTCCTTCCAGTACTGCTGCATTAGGTGAACAAGAAAAAT

TGAACTTATTACAAAGAGCCTACGCAAGATTATTCCCTGGTGAAC

ATTGGTGAAAGCTT

ACB1 ATGGTTTCCCAATTATTCGAAGAAAAAGCTAAAGCCGTCAACGA 178

GCTACCAACGAAGCCCTCCACTGATGAATTATTAGAATTGTATGC

TCTGTACAAGCAAGCCACTGTAGGTGACAACGACAAGGAAAAGC

CTQGTATTTTCAACATGAAGGACCGCTACAAGTGGGAAGCCTGG

GAAAACTTAAAAGGTAAATCCCAGGAAGATGCCGAAAAGGAAT

ACATTGCCCTTGTTGATCAACTGATTGCCAAGTACTCCTCTTAG

FOX2 ATGCCTGGAAATTTATCCTTCAAAGATAGAGTTGTTGTAATCACG 179

GGCGCTGGAGGGGGCTTAGGTAAGGTGTATGCACTAGCTTACGC

AAGCAGAGGTGCAAAAGTGGTCGTCAATGATCTAGGTGGCACTT

TGGGTGGTTCAGGACATAACTCCAAAGCTGCAGACTTAGTGGTG

GATGAGATAAAAAAAGCCGGAGGTATAGCTGTGGCAAATTACGA

CTCTGTTAATGAAAATGGAGAGAAAATAATTGAAACGGCTATAA

AAGAATTCGGCAGGGTTGATGTACTAATTAACAACGCTGGAATA

TTAAGGGATGTTTCATTTGCAAAGATGACAGAACGTGAGTTTGC

ATCTGTGGTAGATGTTCATTTGACAGGTGGCTATAAGCTATCGCG

TGCTGCTTGGCCTTATATGCGCTCTCAGAAATTTGGTAGAATCAT

TAACACCGCTTCCCCTGCCGGTCTATTTGGAAATTTTGGTCAAGC

TAATTATTCAGCAGCTAAAATGGGCTTAGTTGGTTTGGCGGAAAC

CCTCGCGAAGGAGGGTGCCAAATACAACATTAATGTTAATTCAA

TTGCGCCATTGGCTAGATCACGTATGACAGAAAACGTGTTACCA

CCACATATCTTGAAACAGTTAGGACCGGAAAAAATTGTTCCCTTA

GTACTCTATTTGACACACGAAAGTACGAAAGTGTCAAACTCCATT

TTTGAACTCGCTGCTGGATTCTTTGGACAGCTCAGATGGGAGAGG

TCTTCTGGACAAATTTTCAATCCAGACCCCAAGACATATACTCCT

GAAGCAATTTTAAATAAGTGGAAGGAAATCACAGACTATAGGGA

CAAGCCATTTAACAAAACTCAGCATCCATATCAACTCTCGGATTA

TAATGATTTAATCACCAAAGCAAAAAAATTACCTCCCAATGAAC

AAGGCTCAGTGAAAATCAAGTCGCTTTGCAACAAAGTCGTAGTA

GTTACGGGTGCAGGAGGTGGTCTTGGGAAGTCTCATGCAATCTG

GTTTGCACGGTACGGTGCGAAGGTAGTTGTAAATGACATCAAGG

ATCCTTTTTCAGTTGTTGAAGAAATAAATAAACTATATGGTGAAG

GCACAGCCATTCCAGATTCCCATGATGTGGTCACCGAAGCTCCTC

TCATTATCCAAACTGCAATAAGTAAGTTTCAGAGAGTAGACATCT

TGGTCAATAACGCTGGTATTTTGCGTGACAAATCTTTTTTAAAAA

TGAAAGATGAGGAATGGTTTGCTGTCCTGAAAGTCCACCTTTTTT

CCACATTTTCATTGTCAAAAGCAGTATGGCCAATATTTACCAAAC

AAAAGTCTGGATTTATTATCAATACTACTTCTACCTCAGGAATTT

ATGGTAATTTTGGACAGGCCAATTATGCCGCTGCAAAAGCCGCC

ATTTTAGGATTCAGTAAAACTATTGCACTGGAAGGTGCCAAGAG

AGGAATTATTGTTAATGTTATCGCTCCTCATGCAGAAACGGCTAT

GACAAAGACTATATTCTCGGAGAAGGAATTATCAAACCACTTTG

ATGCATCTCAAGTCTCCCCACTTGTTGTTTTGTTGGCATCTGAAG

AACTACAAAAGTATTCTGGAAGAAGGGTTATTGGCCAATTATTC

GAAGTTGGCGGTGGTTGGTGTGGGCAAACCAGATGGCAAAGAAG

TTCCGGTTATGTTTCTATTAAAGAGACTATTGAACCGGAAGAAAT

TAAAGAAAATTGGAACCACATCACTGATTTCAGTCGCAACACTA

TCAACCCGAGCTCCACAGAGGAGTCTTCTATGGCAACCTTGCAA

GCCGTGCAAAAAGCGCACTCTTCAAAGGAGTTGGATGATGGATT

ATTCAAGTACACTACCAAGGATTGTATCTTGTACAATTTAGGACT

TGGATGCACAAGCAAAGAGCTTAAGTACACCTACGAGAATGATC

CAGACTTCCAAGTTTTGCCCACGTTCGCCGTCATTCCATTTATGC

AAGCTACTGCCACACTAGCTATGGACAATTTAGTCGATAACTTCA

ATTATGCAATGTTACTGCATGGAGAACAATATTTTAAGCTCTGCA

CGCCGACAATGCCAAGTAATGGAACTCTAAAGACACTTGCTAAA

CCTTTACAAGTACTTGACAAGAATGGTAAAGCCGCTTTAGTTGTT

GGTGGCTTCGAAACTTATGACATTAAAACTAAGAAACTCATAGC TTATAACGAAGGATCGTTCTTCATCAGGGGCGCACATGTACCTCC AGAAAAGGAAGTGAGGGATGGGAAAAGAGCCAAGTTTGCTGTC

CAAAATTTTGAAGTGCCACATGGAAAGGTACCAGATTTTGAGGC

GGAGATTTCTACGAATAAAGATCAAGCCGCATTGTACAGGTTAT

CTGGCGATTTCAATCCTTTACATATCGATCCCACGCTAGCCAAAG

CAGTTAAATTTCCTACGCCAATTCTGCATGGGCTTTGTACATTAG

GTATTAGTGCGAAAGCATTGTTTGAACATTATGGTCCATATGAGG

AGTTGAAAGTGAGATTTACCAATGTTGTTTTCCCAGGTGATACTC

TAAAGGTTAAAGCTTGGAAGCAAGGCTCGGTTGTCGTTTTTCAAA

CAATTGATACGACCAGAAACGTCATTGTATTGGATAACGCCGCT

GTAAAACTATCGCAGGCAAAATAA

FOX3 ATGGGTAAGGGTGAATCGAAGAGGAAGAACTCGTTGCTGGAGA

AAAGACCCGAAGATGTAGTTATTGTGGCTGCTAACAGGTCTGCC

ATCGGTAAAGGTTTTAAAGGTGCCTTCAAAGATGTAAACACAGA

CTACTTATTATACAACTTTCTCAATGAGTTCATCGGGAGGTTTCC

GGAACCTTTGAGGGCTGATTTGAACTTAATCGAAGAAGTTGCCT

GTGGAAATGTTCTCAATGTTGGAGCCGGTGCTACAGAACACAGG

GCTGCATGCTTGGCAAGTGGGATTCCCTACTCGACGCCATTTGTC

GCTTTAAACAGACAATGTTCTTCAGGTTTAACGGCGGTGAACGAT

ATTGCCAACAAGATTAAGGTTGGGCAAATTGATATTGGTTTGGC

GCTGGGAGTGGAATCAATGACCAATAACTACAAAAACGTCAATC

CCTTGGGCATGATCTCCTCTGAAGAGCTGCAAAAAAACCGAGAA

GCGAAGAAATGTCTAATACCAATGGGCATTACTAATGAGAATGT

TGCCGCTAATTTCAAGATCAGTAGAAAGGATCAAGACGAGTTCG

CTGCGAATTCATATCAAAAAGCTTACAAGGCGAAAAATGAGGGG

CTTTTCGAAGATGAAATTTTACCTATAAAATTACCAGATGGCTCA

ATTTGCCAGTCGGACGAAGGGCCACGCCCTAACGTCACTGCGGA

GTCGCTTTCAAGCATCAGGCCTGCCTTTATCAAAGACAGAGGAA

CCACAACTGCGGGCAATGCATCCCAGGTCTCCGATGGTGTGGCA GGTGTCTTGTTAGCCCGCAGGTCCGTAGCCAACCAGTTAAATCTG

CCTGTGCTAGGTCGCTACATCGATTTTCAAACAGTGGGGGTTCCC

CCTGAAATCATGGGTGTGGGCCCTGCATACGCCATACCAAAAGT

CCTGGAAGCTACTGGCTTGCAAGTCCAAGATATCGATATTTTTGA

AATAAATGAAGCATTCGCGGCCCAAGCATTATACTGCATCCATA

AACTGGGCATCGATTTGAATAAAGTAAATCCAAGAGGTGGTGCA

ATCGCGTTAGGCCATCCCTTGGGTTGTACTGGCGCAAGGCAAGT

AGCTACCATACTAAGAGAACTGAAAAAGGATCAAATCGGGGTTG

TTAGTATGTGTATCGGTACTGGTATGGGTGCCGCCGCCATCTTTA

TTAAAGAATAG

ERG 10 ATGTCTCAGAACGTTTACATTGTATCGACTGCCAGAACCCCAATT

GGTTCATTCCAGGGTTCTCTATCCTCCAAGACAGCAGTGGAATTG

GGTGCTGTTGCTTTAAAAGGCGCCTTGGCTAAGGTTCCAGAATTG

GATGCATCCAAGGATTTTGACGAAATTATTTTTGGTAACGTTCTT

TCTGCCAATTTGGGCCAAGCTCCGGCCAGACAAGTTGCTTTGGCT

GCCGGTTTGAGTAATCATATCGTTGCAAGCACAGTTAACAAGGT

CTGTGCATCCGCTATGAAGGCAATCATTTTGGGTGCTCAATCCAT

CAAATGTGGTAATGCTGATGTTGTCGTAGCTGGTGGTTGTGAATC

TATGACTAACGCACCATACTACATGCCAGCAGCCCGTGCGGGTG

CCAAATTTGGCCAAACTGTTCTTGTTGATGGTGTCGAAAGAGATG

GGTTGAACGATGCGTACGATGGTCTAGCCATGGGTGTACACGCA

GAAAAGTGTGCCCGTGATTGGGATATTACTAGAGAACAACAAGA

CAATTTTGCCATCGAATCCTACCAAAAATCTCAAAAATCTCAAAA

GGAAGGTAAATTCGACAATGAAATTGTACCTGTTACCATTAAGG

GATTTAGAGGTAAGCCTGATACTCAAGTCACGAAGGACGAGGAA

CCTGCTAGATTACACGTTGAAAAATTGAGATCTGCAAGGACTGTT

TTCCAAAAAGAAAACGGTACTGTTACTGCCGCTAACGCTTCTCCA

ATCAACGATGGTGCTGCAGCCGTCATCTTGGTTTCCGAAAAAGTT

TTGAAGGAAAAGAATTTGAAGCCTTTGGCTATTATCAAAGGTTG

GGGTGAGGCCGCTCATCAACCAGCTGATTTTACATGGGCTCCATC

TCTTGCAGTTCCAAAGGCTTTGAAACATGCTGGCATCGAAGACAT

CAATTCTGTTGATTACTTTGAATTCAATGAAGCCTTTTCGGTTGTC

GGTTTGGTGAACACTAAGATTTTGAAGCTAGACCCATCTAAGGTT

AATGTATATGGTGGTGCTGTTGCTCTAGGTCACCCATTGGGTTGT

TCTGGTGCTAGAGTGGTTGTTACACTGCTATCCATCTTACAGCAA

GAAGGAGGTAAGATCGGTGTTGCCGCCATTTGTAATGGTTGA TES1 ATGAGTGCTTCCAAAATGGCCATGTCCAACCTAGAGAAAATATT

GGAACTGGTTCCTCTTTCGCCTACCAGTTTTGTCACAAAGTATCT

GCCTGCCGCGCCCGTAGGGTCTAAGGGCACTTTTGGTGGAACGC

TGGTATCACAATCGCTGCTGGCGTCATTGCATACTGTGCCATTGA

ACTTCTTCCCCACATCGCTACATTCGTATTTCATCAAGGGTGGTG

ATCCGCGGACCAAGATCACGTACCATGTGCAGAATCTGAGAAAC

GGTAGAAATTTCATCCATAAGCAGGTTAGTGCTTATCAGCACGA

CAAGTTGATATTTACGTCGATGATCTTATTTGCCGTGCAACGGTC

CAAGGAGCACGACTCCTTGCAGCACTGGGAGACGATTCCAGGCC

TGCAAGGTAAGCAGCCAGACCCTCATCGTTATGAAGAGGCCACT

TCGCTTTTCCAGAAAGAAGTTCTGGACCCACAGAAATTGAGCAG

GTATGCCTCATTGTCCGACAGGTTCCAAGACGCAACCTCGATGA

GCAAGTATGTGGATGCGTTTCAATACGGAGTCATGGAGTACCAA

TTCCCCAAGGACATGTTCTACTCGGCAAGACACACCGACGAGCT

GGATTATTTCGTCAAAGTGAGACCTCCCATCACTACCGTGGAGCA

CGCGGGCGACGAGTCTTCTTTACACAAGCATCATCCGTACAGGA

TCCCGAAGAGCATTACTCCTGAGAACGACGCTCGCTACAACTAC

GTGGCCTTTGCGTATCTGTCCGATTCCTACCTCCTACTCACGATCC

CGTACTTCCACAACCTGCCTTTGTACTGCCACAGTTTCAGTGTCT

CGCTCGACCACACGATTTACTTTCACCAGTTGCCTCATGTGAACA

ATTGGATCTATCTTAAGATTTCGAATCCCAGGTCCCACTGGGACA

AGCACCTCGTACAGGGCAAGTATTTCGACACACAGTCGGGACGC

ATCATGGCAAGCGTCTCTCAGGAGGGCTACGTTGTCTACGGGTC

AGAAC GAGAC ATTCGATGA

FadA ATGGAACAAGTAGTAATCGTAGACGCAATCAGAACTCCTATGGG

TAGAAGTAAAGGTGGTGCATTCAGAAATGTCAGAGCAGAAGACT

TGTCCGCTCATTTGATGAGAAGTTTGTTAGCAAGAAATCCAGCCT

TGGAAGCTGCAGCCTTAGATGACATCTATTGGGGTTGTGTTCAAC

AAACTTTGGAACAAGGTTTTAATATCGCAAGAAACGCTGCATTG

TTAGCCGAAGTTCCACATTCTGTCCCTGCTGTAACCGTTAACAGA

TTGTGTGGTTCTTCAATGCAAGCATTACACGATGCCGCTAGAATG

ATTATGACTGGTGACGCCCAAGCTTGCTTGGTCGGTGGTGTAGAA

CATATGGGTCACGTCCCAATGTCCCATGGTGTAGATTTCCACCCT

GGTTTAAGTAGAAATGTTGCTAAAGCAGCCGGTATGATGGGTTT

GACAGCTGAAATGTTAGCAAGAATGCATGGTATTTCTAGAGAAA

TGCAAGATGCATTTGCTGCAAGATCTCACGCAAGAGCCTGGGCC

GCTACTCAATCAGCAGCCTTCAAAAATGAAATTATACCAACAGG

TGGTCATGATGCTGACGGTGTTTTGAAGCAATTCAATTACGATGA

AGTTATAAGACCTGAAACTACAGTCGAAGCTTTGGCAACCTTAA

GACCAGCATTCGATCCTGTAAATGGTATGGTTACAGCTGGTACCT

CCAGTGCATTGTCCGACGGTGCTGCAGCCATGTTAGTAATGTCTG

AATCAAGAGCTCACGAATTGGGTTTAAAACCAAGAGCCAGAGTT

AGATCTATGGCTGTTGTCGGTTGCGATCCTTCAATAATGGGTTAC

GGTCCAGTCCCTGCCTCAAAGTTGGCTTTGAAGAAAGCAGGTTTG

TCCGCCAGTGACATCGGTGTTTTTGAAATGAATGAAGCTTTCGCT

GCACAAATATTGCCATGTATCAAGGATTTGGGTTTGATCGAACA

AATAGACGAAAAGATTAATTTGAACGGTGGTGCCATAGCTTTGG

GTCATCCTTTAGGTTGCTCTGGTGCTAGAATCTCAACCACTTTGTT

GAACTTAATGGAAAGAAAGGATGTTCAATTTGGTTTGGCAACTA TGTGTATCGGTTTAGGTCAAGGTATCGCTACTGTATTTGAAAGAG TCTAA

FadB ATGTTGTATAAAGGTGACACATTGTACTTAGACTGGTTAGAAGAT

GGTATCGCTGAATTGGTATTTGATGCTCCTGGTTCCGTAAACAAA

TTGGATACTGCCACAGTAGCTTCCTTAGGTGAAGCAATTGGTGTT

TTGGAACAACAATCCGACTTAAAGGGTTTGTTGTTGAGAAGTAA

TAAGGCTGCTTTTATTGTAGGTGCTGATATCACAGAATTCTTGAG

TTTGTTTTTAGTTCCAGAAGAACAATTGTCTCAATGGTTGCATTTC

GCAAACTCAGTTTTTAACAGATTGGAAGATTTGCCAGTCCCTACC

ATTGCCGCTGTAAACGGTTACGCTTTAGGTGGTGGTTGTGAATGC

GTTTTGGCTACCGACTATAGATTAGCAACTCCAGATTTGAGAATC

GGTTTACCTGAAACTAAATTGGGTATTATGCCAGGTTTTGGTGGT

TCTGTTAGAATGCCTAGAATGTTGGGTGCAGATTCAGCCTTAGAA

ATTATAGCAGCCGGTAAAGACGTTGGTGCTGATCAAGCATTGAA

GATCGGTTTAGTCGATGGTGTTGTCAAAGCTGAAAAGTTGGTTGA

AGGTGCCAAAGCTGTCTTAAGACAAGCCATTAATGGTGACTTGG

ACTGGAAAGCTAAGAGACAACCAAAGTTAGAACCTTTGAAGTTG

TCTAAGATCGAAGCAACAATGTCTTTTACTATAGCCAAGGGTATG

GTCGCCCAAACTGCTGGTAAACATTACCCAGCCCCTATAACTGCT

GTTAAAACAATCGAAGCTGCAGCCAGATTCGGTAGAGAAGAAGC

ATTGAATTTGGAAAACAAGTCTTTTGTTCCATTGGCTCACACAAA

TGAAGCAAGAGCCTTGGTCGGTATTTTCTTGAACGACCAATACGT

AAAGGGTAAAGCTAAGAAATTGACTAAAGATGTTGAAACACCAA

AGCAAGCTGCAGTCTTGGGTGCTGGTATCATGGGTGGTGGTATTG

CATATCAATCCGCCTGGAAAGGTGTTCCTGTAGTTATGAAGGATA

TCAACGACAAGAGTTTGACCTTGGGTATGACTGAAGCCGCTAAG

TTGTTGAACAAGCAATTAGAAAGAGGTAAAATTGACGGTTTGAA

GTTAGCTGGTGTTATATCTACAATCCATCCAACCTTGGATTATGC

TGGTTTCGATAGAGTTGACATTGTCGTAGAAGCAGTTGTCGAAA

ATCCTAAAGTTAAAAAGGCAGTCTTAGCCGAAACAGAACAAAAA

GTTAGACAAGATACCGTTTTGGCTTCCAACACCAGTACTATCCCA

ATTTCAGAATTGGCTAATGCATTAGAAAGACCTGAAAACTTCTGT

GGTATGCATTTCTTTAATCCAGTACACAGAATGCCTTTGGTTGAA

ATCATAAGAGGTGAAAAATCTTCAGATGAAACTATCGCTAAGGT

AGTTGCCTGGGCTTCTAAAATGGGTAAAACACCAATCGTCGTAA

ATGATTGCCCTGGTTTCTTTGTCAACAGAGTATTGTTTCCATACTT

CGCAGGTTTTTCACAATTATTGAGAGATGGTGCCGACTTCAGAAA GATAGATAAGGTTATGGAAAAGCAATTTGGTTGGCCAATGGGTC

CTGCCTATTTGTTGGACGTTGTCGGTATAGATACAGCTCATCACG

CACAAGCCGTTATGGCAGCCGGTTTCCCACAAAGAATGCAAAAA

GATTACAGAGACGCTATTGATGCATTATTCGACGCTAATAGATTT

GGTCAAAAGAATGGTTTGGGTTTTTGGAGATATAAGGAAGATTC

CAAAGGTAAACCTAAAAAGGAAGAAGACGCTGCAGTCGAAGAT

TTGTTGGCAGAAGTATCCCAACCAAAGAGAGATTTCAGTGAAGA

AGAAATCATCGCTAGAATGATGATTCCTATGGTCAACGAAGTAG

TTAGATGTTTAGAAGAAGGTATCATCGCTACCCCAGCTGAAGCA

GATATGGCATTGGTTTACGGTTTAGGTTTCCCACCTTTTCACGGT

GGTGCTTTTAGATGGTTGGACACTTTAGGTTCTGCCAAATATTTG

GATATGGCTCAACAATACCAACATTTGGGTCCATTATATGAAGTT

CCTGAAGGTTTGAGAAACAAGGCTAGACACAATGAACCTTATTA

CCCTCCTGTTGAACCTGCCAGACCTGTTGGTGACTTGAAAACTGC

CTAA

yqeF ATGAAGGATGTCGTAATCGTTGGTGCTTTAAGAACCCCTATCGGT

TGCTTTAGAGGTGCATTGGCTGGTCACTCCGCTGTAGAATTGGGT

TCTTTGGTTGTCAAAGCTTTAATAGAAAGAACTGGTGTACCAGCA

TATGCCGTCGATGAAGTAATCTTGGGTCAAGTTTTAACAGCTGGT

GCAGGTCAAAATCCAGCAAGACAATCAGCCATCAAAGGTGGTTT

GCCTAACTCTGTTTCAGCTATAACTATTAATGACGTCTGTGGTTC

TGGTTTAAAGGCATTGCATTTGGCAACCCAAGCCATTCAATGCGG

TGAAGCAGATATCGTCATTGCCGGTGGTCAAGAAAACATGTCAA

GAGCCCCTCACGTATTGACTGACTCCAGAACAGGTGCACAATTG

GGTAACTCACAATTGGTAGATTCCTTAGTTCATGATGGTTTGTGG

GACGCTTTTAATGATTACCACATCGGTGTTACTGCTGAAAACTTA

GCAAGAGAATACGGTATTTCAAGACAATTGCAAGATGCCTACGC

TTTATCTTCACAACAAAAAGCTAGAGCTGCAATTGACGCAGGTA

GATTCAAAGATGAAATAGTCCCAGTAATGACCCAAAGTAATGGT

CAAACCTTGGTAGTTGATACTGACGAACAACCAAGAACTGACGC

ATCTGCCGAAGGTTTGGCTAGATTAAACCCTTCCTTCGATAGTTT

AGGTTCTGTTACAGCTGGTAATGCATCCAGTATTAACGATGGTGC

CGCTGCAGTCATGATGATGTCAGAAGCTAAAGCAAGAGCCTTGA

ATTTGCCTGTTTTGGCTAGAATTAGAGCTTTTGCATCCGTTGGTGT

CGATCCAGCATTGATGGGTATAGCCCCTGTTTATGCTACCAGAAG

ATGTTTAGAAAGAGTCGGTTGGCAATTGGCTGAAGTAGACTTAA

TAGAAGCCAACGAAGCTTTCGCCGCTCAAGCATTGTCTGTTGGTA

AAATGTTAGAATGGGATGAAAGAAGAGTAAATGTTAACGGTGGT

GCCATAGCTTTAGGTCATCCAATCGGTGCTAGTGGTTGCAGAATT TTGGTTTCTTTAGTCCACGAAATGGTTAAAAGAAATGCTAGAAA

GGGTTTAGCAACATTGTGTATTGGTGGTGGTCAAGGTGTAGCATT

GACTATCGAAAGAGACGAATAA

tdTER ATGATAGTAAAGCCAATGGTAAGGAACAATATCTGTCTTAACGC

CCATCCACAGGGTTGCAAAAAGGGAGTTGAAGATCAAATTGAAT

ACACCAAAAAGAGAATTACAGCAGAGGTCAAGGCAGGGGCAAA

GGCTCCTAAGAACGTCTTAGTTTTGGGTTGTTCTAATGGATACGG

CTTGGCAAGTAGAATAACTGCAGCCTTCGGTTATGGAGCCGCCA

CTATAGGTGTATCATTCGAAAAAGCCGGCTCCGAAACCAAGTAC

GGTACACCTGGCTGGTATAACAATCTAGCTTTTGATGAAGCTGCT

AAGAGAGAAGGGTTATACTCTGTCACAATAGACGGTGACGCATT

TTCTGATGAAATCAAAGCTCAGGTTATTGAAGAGGCCAAGAAAA

AGGGTATCAAATTCGATCTGATAGTATACTCATTAGCATCCCCAG

TGCGTACAGATCCAGATACTGGCATTATGCACAAATCTGTTTTGA

AACCATTTGGAAAAACTTTCACTGGTAAAACAGTTGATCCTTTTA

CAGGAGAACTGAAGGAAATCTCAGCTGAACCAGCTAATGATGAG

GAGGCAGCTGCTACTGTGAAAGTTATGGGTGGAGAGGACTGGGA

AAGATGGATCAAACAACTAAGTAAGGAAGGTTTACTTGAAGAGG

GATGCATCACCTTAGCCTACTCTTACATTGGTCCTGAAGCAACAC

AAGCCCTATACCGTAAAGGAACTATAGGTAAGGCAAAGGAACAC

CTTGAAGCTACTGCTCATCGTCTGAATAAGGAAAATCCATCCATT

AGGGCTTTCGTTAGTGTCAACAAAGGGTTAGTTACCAGAGCATC

AGCTGTGATCCCTGTCATTCCACTTTACCTTGCTTCATTGTTTAAG

GTTATGAAAGAGAAAGGCAATCATGAAGGATGTATCGAACAAAT

CACAAGATTGTACGCTGAGAGATTGTATAGAAAGGATGGTACAA

TTCCTGTGGACGAAGAGAATAGAATTAGAATCGATGATTGGGAG

TTAGAAGAGGACGTTCAAAAAGCTGTTTCTGCATTGATGGAAAA

AGTTACAGGCGAAAATGCTGAGTCACTAACAGACCTGGCAGGTT

ATAGACATGACTTTTTGGCCTCAAACGGGTTTGATGTAGAAGGTA

TCAACTACGAAGCTGAAGTCGAAAGATTCGATAGAATCTAA

tesA ATGGCCGATACTTTGTTAATTTTGGGTGACTCTTTATCAGCCGGT

TATAGAATGTCCGCTAGTGCTGCATGGCCAGCATTGTTAAACGAT

AAATGGCAATCTAAGACTTCAGTTGTCAATGCATCTATATCAGGT

GACACATCACAACAAGGTTTGGCCAGATTACCAGCTTTGTTAAA

ACAACATCAACCTAGATGGGTCTTGGTAGAATTAGGTGGTAACG

ATGGTTTGAGAGGTTTTCAACCTCAACAAACCGAACAAACTTTG

AGACAAATCTTACAAGATGTTAAGGCCGCTAATGCAGAACCATT

GTTAATGCAAATTAGATTACCTGCCAACTATGGTAGAAGATACA ATGAAGCATTTTCTGCAATCTATCCAAAATTGGCAAAGGAATTTG

ATGTACCATTGTTGCCATTTTTCATGGAAGAAGTTTACTTAAAAC

CTCAATGGATGCAAGATGACGGTATTCATCCAAACAGAGATGCT

CAACCTTTTATAGCAGACTGGATGGCCAAACAATTGCAACCATT

AGTCAATCACGATTCTTGA tesB ATGTCTCAAGCTTTGAAGAACTTGTTGACTTTGTTGAACTTGGAA

AAGATCGAAGAAGGTTTGTTCAGAGGTCAATCTGAAGACTTGGG

TTTGAGACAAGTTTTCGGTGGTCAAGTTGTTGGTCAAGCTTTGTA

CGCTGCTAAGGAAACTGTTCCAGAAGAAAGATTGGTTCACTCTTT

CCACTCTTACTTCTTGAGACCAGGTGACTCTAAGAAGCCAATCAT

CTACGACGTTGAAACTTTGAGAGACGGTAACTCTTTCTCTGCTAG

AAGAGTTGCTGCTATCCAAAACGGTAAGCCAATCTTCTACATGA

CTGCTTCTTTCCAAGCTCCAGAAGCTGGTTTCGAACACCAAAAGA

CTATGCCATCTGCTCCAGCTCCAGACGGTTTGCCATCTGAAACTC

AAATCGCTCAATCTTTGGCTCACTTGTTGCCACCAGTTTTGAAGG

ACAAGTTCATCTGTGACAGACCATTGGAAGTTAGACCAGTTGAA

TTCCACAACCCATTGAAGGGTCACGTTGCTGAACCACACAGACA

AGTTTGGATCAGAGCTAACGGTTCTGTTCCAGACGACTTGAGAGT

TCACCAATACTTGTTGGGTTACGCTTCTGACTTGAACTTCTTGCC

AGTTGCTTTGCAACCACACGGTATCGGTTTCTTGGAACCAGGTAT

CCAAATCGCTACTATCGACCACTCTATGTGGTTCCACAGACCATT

CAACTTGAACGAATGGTTGTTGTACTCTGTTGAATCTACTTCTGC

TTCTTCTGCTAGAGGTTTCGTTAGAGGTGAATTCTACACTCAAGA

CGGTGTTTTGGTTGCTTCTACTGTTCAAGAAGGTGTTATGAGAAA

CCACAACTAA

fadM ATGCAAACTCAAATCAAGGTTAGAGGTTACCACTTGGACGTTTA

CCAACACGTTAACAACGCTAGATAC1TGGAATTCTTGGAAGAAG

CTAGATGGGACGGTTTGGAAAACTCTGACTCTTTCCAATGGATGA

CTGCTCACAACATCGCTTTCGTTGTTGTTAACATCAACATCAACT

ACAGAAGACCAGCTGTTTTGTCTGACTTGTTGACTATCACTTCTC

AATTGCAACAATTGAACGGTAAGTCTGGTATCTTGTCTCAAGTTA

TCACTTTGGAACCAGAAGGTCAAGTTGTTGCTGACGCTTTGATCA

CTTTCGTTTGTATCGACTTGAAGACTCAAAAGGCTTTGGCTTTGG

AAGGTGAATTGAGAGAAAAGTTGGAACAAATGGTTAAGTAA

yciA ATGTCTACTACTCACAACGTTCCACAAGGTGACTTGGTTTTGAGA

ACTTTGGCTATGCCAGCTGACACTAACGCTAACGGTGACATCTTC

GGTGGTTGGTTGATGTCTCAAATGGACATCGGTGGTGCTATCTTG

GCTAAGGAAATCGCTCACGGTAGAGTTGTTACTGTTAGAGTTGA

AGGTATGACTTTCTTGAGACCAGTTGCTGTTGGTGACGTTGTTTG

TTGTTACGCTAGATGTGTTCAAAAGGGTACTACTTCTGTTTCTAT

CAACATCGAAGTTTGGGTTAAGAAGGTTGCTTCTGAACCAATCG

GTCAAAGATACAAGGCTACTGAAGCTTTGTTCAAGTACGTTGCTG

TTGACCCAGAAGGTAAGCCAAGAGCTTTGCCAGTTGAATAA I ETR1 I ATGCTCACTTATGGAGGAATGTCAAAACAACCTGTAACTTTACCA 191 ACATCTCTACACATTTTCAAAGGCTTGACATCCAAAGGATACTGG GTGACTGAAAAGAACAAAAAAAACCCCCAAAGCAAAATTGACA CCATCAGTGATTTTATCAAAATGTATAATGATGGTCACATTATTT CACCAAGAGATGAAATTGAAACTCTTACCTGGAATACTAACACT ACTACTGACGAACAGTTACTAGAACTAGTCAAAAAAGGCATAAC TGGGAAGGGGAAGAAAAAAATGGTTGTTTTAGAATGGTAA

HFA1 ATGAGATCTATAAGAAAATGGGCGTACGAGACGTTCAATG 192

ATGAAAAAATCATTCAATTCGTGGTAATGGCGACACCTGAT

GATTTACACGCAAATTCGGAGTATATTAGAATGGCAGACCA

ATATGTGCAGGTACCAGGGGGTACCAACAACAACAATTAC

GCCAACATAGACTTAATACTGGACGTGGCAGAGCAAACGG

ATGTGGATGCGGTCTGGGCTGGATGGGGCCATGCTTCTGAA

AATCCGTGTCTTCCTGAGCTGTTAGCTAGTTCACAAAGGAA

AATACTATTCATTGGTCCTCCTGGACGCGCTATGAGATCAT

TGGGTGACAAGATTTCTTCCACTATTGTAGCACAAAGCGCT

AAAATCCCGTGTATCCCTTGGTCTGGTTCACATATAGACAC

TATCCATATCGATAACAAGACGAACTTTGTATCTGTGCCGG

ATGATGTATATGTAAGGGGATGTTGTTCCTCACCTGAAGAT

GCTTTAGAAAAGGCTAAATTAATAGGATTTCCTGTAATGAT

TAAGGCATCCGAAGGTGGTGGAGGTAAGGGCATTAGGCGA

GTAGATAATGAGGATGATTTTATTGCATTATATCGCCAAGC

AGTGAATGAGACACCTGGGTCGCCTATGTTTGTTATGAAAG

TTGTCACTGATGCTCGTCACTTAGAGGTACAGTTATTAGCT

GACCAATATGGCACTAACATTACATTGTTTGGGAGAGACTG

TTCCATACAAAGGCGGCACCAAAAGATTATAGAAGAGGCA

CCAGTGACAATAACCAAGCCTGAAACGTTTCAAAGGATGG

AACGCGCAGCAATTCGTCTAGGTGAATTGGTAGGTTATGTT

TCTGCGGGCACTGTCGAATACTTATATTCACCAAAAGATGA

TAAATTTTACTTTTTAGAACTGAATCCAAGACTACAAGTAG

AGCATCCAACGACAGAAATGATATCTGGCGTAAACCTTCCT

GCCACTCAACTGCAAATCGCCATGGGTATTCCTATGCACAT

GATAAGTGATATCAGAAAACTTTATGGTTTAGATCCAACGG

GAACTTCGTATATTGATTTTAAAAATTTAAAGAGACCCTCG

CCAAAAGGCCATTGTATTTCATGCAGGATCACTTCAGAAGA

TCCTAATGAAGGTTTCAAGCCCTCCACTGGGAAAATACATG

AGCTCAATTTTCGTTCTTCTTCCAATGTTTGGGGTTACTTCT

CAGTAGGAAATAATGGTGCTATTCACTCATTTTCAGATTCC

CAATTTGGGCACATTTTTGCTGTAGGAAACGATAGGCAAGA

TGCAAAGCAAAACATGGTTTTAGCTCTAAAAGATTTTTCCA

TCCGAGGAGAATTCAAAACCCCTATAGAGTACCTGATAGA

GCTATTAGAAACTCGGGACTTTGAGAGTAATAACATATCGA

CTGGTTGGTTAGATGATTTGATTTTGAAAAATTTATCTTCCG

ATAGCAAACTAGATCCAACGCTCGCTATTATCTGTGGTGCC

GCAATGAAAGCATACGTTTTCACAGAAAAGGTGAGGAATA

AGTATTTGGAATTATTGCGGAGGGGCCAAGTTCCACCTAAA

GATTTTCTTAAAACGAAGTTTCCTGTTGACTTCATTTTCGAT

AATAATAGATACTTGTTCAATGTTGCTCAATCATCTGAAGA

ACAATTTATTCTTTCTATCAATAAGTCTCAATGTGAAGTTAA

TGTTCAAAAATTGTCCGGTGACTGCTTGTTGATCTCCGTTGA

CGGTAAATGCCATACAGTTTATTGGAAGGACGATATCAGA

GGTACAAGACTTTCGATAGACTCCAATACCATATTTTTAGA

AGCTGAACTCAATCCCACTCAAGTGATCTCTCCAACTCCGG

GGAAATTGGTGAAATATTTGGTCCGAAGTGGTGATCACGTT

TTTGCTGGACAGCAATATGCAGAAATAGAAATAATGAAAA

TGCAGATGCCACTAGTAGCGAAAAGTGATGGTGTAATTGA

GTTACTAAGACAGCCCGGTTCCATAATTGAGGCTGGTGATG TCATCGCAAAATTGACTTTGGATTCACCGTCCAAAGCTAAC

GAATCGTCTTTATACCGCGGAGAATTACCTGTTTTAGGTCC

ACCGCTAATAGAGGGTAGCCGACCAAACCATAAGCTCAGA

GTCTTAATAAATAGGTTAGAAAATATTCTCAATGGATATCA

TGAAAACTCTGGAATAGAAACTACTCTAAAAGAGTTGATA

AAAATATTGAGAGATGGTAGGCTTCCTTATTCAGAATGGGA

TTCCCAAATTTCTACGGTACGCAATAGACTACCAAGGCAAT

TGAATGAGGGGCTGGGAAATCTAGTCAAGAAATCTGTTTCT

TTTCCTGCAAAGGAACTGCACAAATTAATGAAGCGCTACTT

GGAAGAAAATACAAATGATCATGTAGTTTATGTTGCCTTAC

AGCCACTTCTTAAAATTAGTGAAAGGTATAGCGAAGGTTTA

GCTAATCACGAATGTGAAATTTTTTTAAAGTTGATTAAAAA

GTATTATGCTGTTGAGAAAATTTTTGAAAATCATGATATAC

ATGAAGAAAGAAACTTACTAAATCTGCGGAGGAAAGACCT

TACAAACTTAAAAGAAATTTTGTGCATAAGTTTATCGCATG

CTAACGTAGTCGCAAAGAACAAGTTAGTAACTGCAATATTG

CATGAATACGAGCCATTGTGCCAGGATTCCTCTAAGATGTC

TTTAAAATTCAGGGCTGTTATACATGATTTGGCAAGTTTGG

AATCTAAGTGGGCTAAGGAGGTTGCTGTAAAGGCAAGATC

AGTGCTACTCAGAGGGATTTTCCCTCCCATAAAGAAAAGAA

AAGAGCATATTAAAACTCTCCTGCAATTGCACATAAAGGAT

ACTGGTGCCAAAAACATTCACAGCAGGAACATATATTCCTG

TATGAGGGATTTTGGTAATTTAATACATTCAAATCTGATAC

AACTTCAGGATTTGTTCTTTTTTTTTGGCCATCAAGATACGG

CTCTTTCCAGTATAGCATCTGAAATTTATGCAAGGTATGCC

TACGGCAATTATCAATTAAAAAGTATTAAGATTCACAAAGG

AGCGCCTGATTTACTAATGTCATGGCAATTCAGCTCATTAA

GAAATTATTTAGTCAATCCTGATGGTGAGAGTGATGAGTTT

ACAAAACTTTCTAAACCTCCCTCAACATCAGGTAAGAGCTC

AGCAAATAGTTTTGGTCTTCTTGTCAACATGCGTGCGCTTG

AATCTCTGGAAAAGACATTAGACGAGGTATACGAACAAAT

TCATATTCCTGAGGAAAGACTTTCCAGCGGAGAGAACTCTC

TTATTGTTAATATTTTATCTCCTATTCGTTACAGAAGTGAAA

ATGATCTAATTAAAACTTTAAAAATTAAACTTCATGAAAAT

GAGAGAGGTCTATCCAAGCTCAAGGTTAATCGTATTACATT

TGCATTTATCGCCGCGAATGCGCCCACTGTTAAATTTTACTC

CTTTGATGGAACTACGTACGATGAAATCTCTCAAATAAGAA

ATATGGATCCATCCTATGAAGCACCGTTAGAGTTAGGAAAA

ATGTCGAACTATAAAATCAGATCACTACCTACATACGATAG

TAGTATACGCATTTTTGAAGGTATTAGCAAATTTACGCCGC

TAGATAAAAGGTTCTTTGTCAGGAAAATCATAAATTCCTTC

ATGTATAATGATCAAAAAACAACCGAAGAAAACTTGAAAG

CGGAAATCAATGCTCAAGTGGTTTATATGTTAGAACATCTA

GGAGCAGTTGACACCTCAAATTCAGACTTGAATCATATTTT

TTTAAGTTTCAATACAGTTCTTAACATACCAGTACATCGTCT

CGAGGAAATTGTGAGTACAATTCTAAAGACTCACGAAACC

AGATTGTTTCAAGAAAGAATCACAGATGTAGAAATTTGCAT

CTCTGTTGAGTGCCTAGAAACAAAGAAGCCAGCCCCGCTTA

GATTACTTATTTCTAATAAATCTGGGTATGTGGTAAAAATT

GAGACATATTACGAAAAGATAGGGAAAAATGGGAATCTGA TTTTGGAACCGTGTAGTGAGCAGAGCCATTATAGCCAGAAA

TCTCTCTCTCTTCCTTACTCGGTCAAGGATTGGCTACAACCT

AAAAGATACAAAGCTCAATTCATGGGTACAACATATGTGT

ACGATTTCCCAGGTCTGTTTCATCAAGCTGCAATCCAACAG

TGGAAAAGGTATTTTCCAAAACATAAGCTGAATGACAGTTT

TTTTAGTTGGGTTGAATTGATAGAACAAAACGGTAATTTGA

TAAAAGTAAACAGGGAGCCAGGCCTTAATAATATAGGGAT

GGTT

GCTTTTGAGATTATGGTTCAGACACCTGAATATCCTGAAGG

GCGTAACATGATCGTGATTTCTAATGATATTACCTACAATA

TTGGATCTTTTGGACCGAGAGAAGATTTGTTTTTTGATAGG

GTCACAAATTATGCAAGAGAGAGAGGGATCCCGAGGATAT

ACTTGGCGGCGAATTCAGGAGCTAAATTGGGTATAGCCGA

AGAGCTGATCCCTCTATTTCGTGTAGCATGGAATGACCCCT

CTGATCCAACAAAGGGTTTCCAGTACTTATACTTAGCTCCA

AAAGACATGCAGCTACTGAAAGATTCTGGGAAAGGAAATT

CGGTTGTTGTTGAACACAAGATGGTATACGGTGAAGAGAG

ATATATTATTAAAGCAATAGTCGGATTCGAAGAGGGTTTAG

GTGTTGAATGTTTACAGGGCTCAGGTTTAATTGCTGGTGCC

ACTTCGAAAGCGTATAGAGACATTTTCACTATTACTGCTGT

TACTTGTCGGTCCGTTGGTATAGGTTCCTATCTGGTCAGACT

AGGACAACGTACTATTCAGGTGGAGGATAAGCCTATCATA

CTGACGGGTGCATCGGCGATTAATAAAGTTTTGGGTACCGA

TATCTATACATCTAACCTACAAATTGGCGGAACCCAAATCA

TGTATAAAAACGGAATAGCGCATTTAACAGCCAGTAATGA

TATGAAAGCCATCGAAAAAATAATGACATGGTTATCATATG

TCCCGGCGAAAAGAGATATGAGTCCTCCACTTCTTGAAACT

ATGGATAGATGGGATAGGGATGTAGACTTCAAACCTGCCA

AGCAAGTGCCATATGAGGCAAGGTGGTTGATAGAGGGTAA

ATGGGACTCAAATAACAACTTCCAGTCAGGCCTATTTGATA

AGGATTCGTTTTTTGAGACATTATCTGGATGGGCCAAAGGT

GTAATAGTTGGAAGAGCACGTCTTGGAGGTATTCCCGTAGG

TGTTATTGCGGTAGAAACTAAGACTATCGAAGAAACAATCC

CCGCTGACCCAGCTAATCTGGATTCTTCAGAGTTTTCCGTTA

AAGAAGCAGGACAGGTGTGGTATCCAAATTCCGCGTTCAA

AACAGCTCAAACTATAAATGATTTTAACTATGGTGAGCAAT

TACCATTGATTATCTTAGCCAATTGGAGGGGATTTTCTGGC

GGTCAAAGGGATATGTACAATGAAGTACTAAAGTACGGGT

CTTTTATTGTTGACGCTCTGGTTGACTACAAACAACCCATA

CTGATATACATTCCGCCCTTTGGTGAATTAAGGGGCGGATC

ATGGGTTGTTATAGATCCAACTATTAATCCTGAACAAATGG

AAATGTATGCCGATGTTGAATCTAGGGGAGGTGTGTTAGAA

CCTGACGGAGTAGTTAGCATAAAATACCGTAAGGAGAAAA

TGATAGAGACGATGATTCGATTAGACTCCACATATGGACAT

TTGAGAAGAACGTTGACAGAAAAAAAGTTATCTTTGGAAA

AACAAAATGATCTTACGAAGAGATTGAAAATAAGAGAGAG

ACAGTTGATACCAATTTATAATCAAATCAGCATACAGTTTG

CAGATTTACATGATAGATCGACTAGGATGCTAGTTAAAGGA

GTAATCCGAAAGGAGTTGGAATGGAAAAAGTCACGCAGAT

TTTTATATTGGAGACTGAGAAGGAGGTTGAACGAGGGACA AGTGATCAAAAGACTGCAAAAAAAAACATGTGATAACAAA

ACGAAAATGAAATACGACGACCTGTTGAAAATAGTTCAGT

CATGGTATAACGATCTGGATGTTAATGATGACAGAGCAGTA

GTGGAGTTCATAGAAAGAAATTCGAAAAAAATTGACAAGA

ACATTGAAGAGTTTGAGATCTCGCTGTTGATCGATGAGCTT

AAGAAAAAATTTGAAGACAGAAGGGGAAACATTGTCCTTG

AAGAGCTAACTAGGTTGGTGGACAGTAAGCGAAAGAGATA

G

3xARE AATAAGGATCTCGAACCTTGTGCGATGACAACAGCATGTG 1+pTE AATAAGGATCTCGAACCTTGTGCGATGACAACAGCATGTG Flcore AATAAGGATCTCGAACCTTGTGCGATGACAACAGCATGTG

AATAAGGATCTCGAACCATTGATATTTAAGTTAATAAACGG

TCTTCAATTTCTCAAGTTTCAGTTTCATTTTTCTTGTTCTATT

ACAACTTTTTTTACTTCTTGCTCATTAGAAAGAAAGCATAG

CAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAA

pTEFl( CACACACCATAGCTTCAAAATGTTTCTACTCCTTTTTTACTC 3xARE TTCCAGATTTTCTCGGACTCCGCGCATCGCCGTACCACTTCA 1) AAACACCCAAGCACAGCATACTAAATTTCCCCTCTTTCTTC

CTCTAGGGTGTCGTTAATTACCCGTACTAAAGGTTTGGAAA

AGAAAAAAGAGACCGCCTCGTTTCTTTTTCTTCGTCGAAAA

AGGCAATAAAAATTTTTATCACGTTTCTTTTTCTTGAAAATT

TTTTTTTTTGATTTTTTTCTCTTTCGATGACCTCCCATTGATA

TTTAAGTTAATAAACGGTCTTCAATTTCTCAAGTTTCAGTTT

CATTTTTCTTGTTCCTTGTGCGATGACAACAGCATGTGTATT

ACAACTTTTTTTACTTCTTCTTGTGCGATGACAACAGCATGT

GGCTCATTAGAAACTTGTGCGATGACAACAGCATGTGGAA

AGCATAGCAATCTAATCTAAGTTTTAATTACAAA