1. Engineering sorghum for higher 4-hydroxybenzoic acid content
- Author
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Lin, Chien-Yuan, Tian, Yang, Nelson-Vasilchik, Kimberly, Hague, Joel, Kakumanu, Ramu, Lee, Mi Yeon, Pidatala, Venkataramana R, Trinh, Jessica, De Ben, Christopher M, Dalton, Jutta, Northen, Trent R, Baidoo, Edward EK, Simmons, Blake A, Gladden, John M, Scown, Corinne D, Putnam, Daniel H, Kausch, Albert P, Scheller, Henrik V, and Eudes, Aymerick
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Industrial Biotechnology ,Genetics ,Sorghum ,Bioproduct ,4-Hydroxybenzoic acid ,Shikimate ,Bioenergy crop ,4-HBA ,4-hydroxybenzoic acid ,CWR ,cell wall residue ,CaMV ,cauliflower mosaic virus ,DAHP ,3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate ,HPLC-ESI-TOF-MS ,high performance liquid chromatography electrospray ionization and time-of-flight mass spectrometry ,RT-qPCR ,reverse transcription quantitative PCR ,RuBisCo ,ribulose-1 ,5- bisphosphate carboxylase ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical biochemistry and metabolomics - Abstract
Engineering bioenergy crops to accumulate coproducts in planta can increase the value of lignocellulosic biomass and enable a sustainable bioeconomy. In this study, we engineered sorghum with a bacterial gene encoding a chorismate pyruvate-lyase (ubiC) to reroute the plastidial pool of chorismate from the shikimate pathway into the valuable compound 4-hydroxybenzoic acid (4-HBA). A gene encoding a feedback-resistant version of 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulonate-7-phosphate synthase (aroG) was also introduced in an attempt to increase the carbon flux through the shikimate pathway. At the full maturity and senesced stage, two independent lines that co-express ubiC and aroG produced 1.5 and 1.7 dw% of 4-HBA in biomass, which represents 36- and 40-fold increases compared to the titer measured in wildtype. The two transgenic lines showed no obvious phenotypes, growth defects, nor alteration of cell wall polysaccharide content when cultivated under controlled conditions. In the field, when harvested before grain maturity, transgenic lines contained 0.8 and 1.2 dw% of 4-HBA, which represent economically relevant titers based on recent technoeconomic analysis. Only a slight reduction (11-15%) in biomass yield was observed in transgenics grown under natural environment. This work provides the first metabolic engineering steps toward 4-HBA overproduction in the bioenergy crop sorghum to improve the economics of biorefineries by accumulating a value-added coproduct that can be recovered from biomass and provide an additional revenue stream.
- Published
- 2022