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A biosynthetic pathway for hexanoic acid production in Kluyveromyces marxianus

Authors :
Jin-Ho Seo
Kwang Myung Cho
Jae Hyung Lim
Dae-Hyuk Kweon
Jin Byung Park
Jin Hwan Park
Paul Heo
Suk-Jin Ha
Gyoo Yeol Jung
Hyun Koo
Yuna Cheon
Jun Seob Kim
Jun Bum Park
Source :
Journal of Biotechnology. :30-36
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

Hexanoic acid can be used for diverse industrial applications and is a precursor for fine chemistry. Although some natural microorganisms have been screened and evolved to produce hexanoic acid, the construction of an engineered biosynthetic pathway for producing hexanoic acid in yeast has not been reported. Here we constructed hexanoic acid pathways in Kluyveromyces marxianus by integrating 5 combinations of seven genes (AtoB, BktB, Crt, Hbd, MCT1, Ter, and TES1), by which random chromosomal sites of the strain are overwritten by the new genes from bacteria and yeast. One recombinant strain, H4A, which contained AtoB, BktB, Crt, Hbd, and Ter, produced 154 mg/L of hexanoic acid from galactose as the sole substrate. However, the hexanoic acid produced by the H4A strain was re-assimilated during the fermentation due to the reverse activity of AtoB, which condenses two acetyl-CoAs into a single acetoacetyl-CoA. This product instability could be overcome by the replacement of AtoB with a malonyl CoA-acyl carrier protein transacylase (MCT1) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our results suggest that Mct1 provides a slow but stable acetyl-CoA chain elongation pathway, whereas the AtoB-mediated route is fast but unstable. In conclusion, hexanoic acid was produced for the first time in yeast by the construction of chain elongation pathways comprising 5–7 genes in K. marxianus.

Details

ISSN :
01681656
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....445910237d089b2448fbce7508feb9f2