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Engineering of solvent-tolerant Pseudomonas putida S12 for bioproduction of phenol from glucose.

Authors :
Wierckx NJ
Ballerstedt H
de Bont JA
Wery J
Source :
Applied and environmental microbiology [Appl Environ Microbiol] 2005 Dec; Vol. 71 (12), pp. 8221-7.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Efficient bioconversion of glucose to phenol via the central metabolite tyrosine was achieved in the solvent-tolerant strain Pseudomonas putida S12. The tpl gene from Pantoea agglomerans, encoding tyrosine phenol lyase, was introduced into P. putida S12 to enable phenol production. Tyrosine availability was a bottleneck for efficient production. The production host was optimized by overexpressing the aroF-1 gene, which codes for the first enzyme in the tyrosine biosynthetic pathway, and by random mutagenesis procedures involving selection with the toxic antimetabolites m-fluoro-dl-phenylalanine and m-fluoro-l-tyrosine. High-throughput screening of analogue-resistant mutants obtained in this way yielded a P. putida S12 derivative capable of producing 1.5 mM phenol in a shake flask culture with a yield of 6.7% (mol/mol). In a fed-batch process, the productivity was limited by accumulation of 5 mM phenol in the medium. This toxicity was overcome by use of octanol as an extractant for phenol in a biphasic medium-octanol system. This approach resulted in accumulation of 58 mM phenol in the octanol phase, and there was a twofold increase in the overall production compared to a single-phase fed batch.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0099-2240
Volume :
71
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Applied and environmental microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16332806
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.71.12.8221-8227.2005