Publication | Closed Access
Optimization of Artificial Curcumin Biosynthesis in <i>E. coli</i> by Randomized 5′-UTR Sequences To Control the Multienzyme Pathway
33
Citations
35
References
2018
Year
EngineeringChemical BiologyMetabolic ModelMultienzyme PathwayMetabolic NetworkBiosynthesisOptimization StrategiesBiochemical EngineeringMetabolic EngineeringNatural Product BiosynthesisMetabolic Pathway AnalysisBiotransformationBiochemistryEnzyme ExpressionArtificial Curcumin BiosynthesisRandomized 5′-Utr SequencesBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyMicrobiologySystems BiologyPathway EngineeringArtificial Biosynthesis
One of the optimization strategies of an artificial biosynthetic metabolic flux with a multienzyme pathway is when the enzyme concentrations are present at the appropriate ratios rather than at their maximum expression. Thus, many recent research efforts have focused on the development of tools that fine-tune the enzyme expression, and these research efforts have facilitated the search for the optimum balance between pathway expression and cell viability. However, the rational approach has some limitations in finding the most optimized expression ratio in in vivo systems. In our study, we focused on fine-tuning the expression level of a six-enzyme reaction for the artificial biosynthesis of curcumin by screening a library of 5'-untranslational region (UTR) sequence mutants made by a multiplex automatic genome engineering (MAGE) tool. From the screening results, a variant (6M08rv) showed about a 38.2-fold improvement in the production of curcumin compared to the parent strain, in which the calculated expression levels of 4-coumarate:CoA ligase (4CL) and phenyldiketide-CoA synthase (DCS), two of the six enzymes, were much lower than those of the parent strain.
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