Publication | Open Access
Porting the synthetic D‐glucaric acid pathway from <i>Escherichia coli</i> to <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i>
63
Citations
18
References
2016
Year
Miox EnzymeEngineeringMetabolic NetworksBiosynthesisGrowth RateBiochemical EngineeringMetabolic EngineeringYeastBiotransformationBiochemistryMedicineFungal Cell FactoryBiomolecular EngineeringMetabolic PathwaysCellular EnzymologyBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyD-glucaric AcidMicrobiologyPathway Engineering
D-Glucaric acid can be produced as a value-added chemical from biomass through a de novo pathway in Escherichia coli. However, previous studies have identified pH-mediated toxicity at product concentrations of 5 g/L and have also found the eukaryotic myo-inositol oxygenase (MIOX) enzyme to be rate-limiting. We ported this pathway to Saccaromyces cerevisiae, which is naturally acid-tolerant and evaluate a codon-optimized MIOX homologue. We constructed two engineered yeast strains that were distinguished solely by their MIOX gene - either the previous version from Mus musculus or a homologue from Arabidopsis thaliana codon-optimized for expression in S. cerevisiae - in order to identify the rate-limiting steps for D-glucaric acid production both from a fermentative and non-fermentative carbon source. myo-Inositol availability was found to be rate-limiting from glucose in both strains and demonstrated to be dependent on growth rate, whereas the previously used M. musculus MIOX activity was found to be rate-limiting from glycerol. Maximum titers were 0.56 g/L from glucose in batch mode, 0.98 g/L from glucose in fed-batch mode, and 1.6 g/L from glucose supplemented with myo-inositol. Future work focusing on the MIOX enzyme, the interplay between growth and production modes, and promoting aerobic respiration should further improve this pathway.
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