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Engineering high-level production of fatty alcohols by Saccharomyces cerevisiae from lignocellulosic feedstocks.

Authors :
d’Espaux, Leo
Ghosh, Amit
Runguphan, Weerawat
Wehrs, Maren
Xu, Feng
Konzock, Oliver
Dev, Ishaan
Nhan, Melissa
Gin, Jennifer
Reider Apel, Amanda
Petzold, Christopher J.
Singh, Seema
Simmons, Blake A.
Mukhopadhyay, Aindrila
García Martín, Héctor
Keasling, Jay D.
Source :
Metabolic Engineering. Jul2017, Vol. 42, p115-125. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Fatty alcohols in the C12-C18 range are used in personal care products, lubricants, and potentially biofuels. These compounds can be produced from the fatty acid pathway by a fatty acid reductase (FAR), yet yields from the preferred industrial host Saccharomyces cerevisiae remain under 2% of the theoretical maximum from glucose. Here we improved titer and yield of fatty alcohols using an approach involving quantitative analysis of protein levels and metabolic flux, engineering enzyme level and localization, pull-push-block engineering of carbon flux, and cofactor balancing. We compared four heterologous FARs, finding highest activity and endoplasmic reticulum localization from a Mus musculus FAR. After screening an additional twenty-one single-gene edits, we identified increasing FAR expression; deleting competing reactions encoded by DGA1 , HFD1 , and ADH6 ; overexpressing a mutant acetyl-CoA carboxylase; limiting NADPH and carbon usage by the glutamate dehydrogenase encoded by GDH1 ; and overexpressing the Δ9-desaturase encoded by OLE1 as successful strategies to improve titer. Our final strain produced 1.2 g/L fatty alcohols in shake flasks, and 6.0 g/L in fed-batch fermentation, corresponding to ~ 20% of the maximum theoretical yield from glucose, the highest titers and yields reported to date in S. cerevisiae . We further demonstrate high-level production from lignocellulosic feedstocks derived from ionic-liquid treated switchgrass and sorghum, reaching 0.7 g/L in shake flasks. Altogether, our work represents progress towards efficient and renewable microbial production of fatty acid-derived products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10967176
Volume :
42
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Metabolic Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
124250596
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymben.2017.06.004