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Metabolic engineering of the malonyl-CoA pathway to efficiently produce malonate in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors :
Li S
Fu W
Su R
Zhao Y
Deng Y
Source :
Metabolic engineering [Metab Eng] 2022 Sep; Vol. 73, pp. 1-10. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 May 25.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Malonate is a platform chemical that has been utilized to synthesize many valuable chemical compounds. Here, Saccharomyces cerevisiae was metabolically engineered to produce malonate through the malonyl-CoA pathway. To construct the key step of converting malonyl-CoA to malonate, a native mitochondrial 3-hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA hydrolase gene EHD3 was mutated to target the cytoplasm and obtain malonyl-CoA hydrolase activity. The malonyl-CoA hydrolase activity of Ehd3 was achieved by mutating the malonyl-CoA binding site F121 to I121 and the active site E124 to seven amino acids (S/T/H/K/R/N/Q). We identified that the strain with E124S mutation had the highest malonate titer with 13.6 mg/L. Genomic integration of the mutant EHD3 and ACC1** to delta sequence sites was further explored to increase their reliable expression. Accordingly, a screening method with the work flow of fluorescence detection, shake-tube fermentation, and shake-flask fermentation was constructed to screen high copy delta sequences efficiently. The malonate titer was improved to 73.55 mg/L after screening the ∼1500 integrative strains, which was increased 4.4-folds than that of the episomal strain. We further engineered the strain by regulating the expression of key enzyme in the malonyl-CoA pathway to improve the precursor supply and inhibiting its competing pathways, and the final engineered strain LMA-16 produced 187.25 mg/L in the flask, 14-fold compared with the initial episomal expression strain. Finally, the combined efforts increased the malonate titer to 1.62 g/L in fed-batch fermentation.<br /> (Copyright © 2022 International Metabolic Engineering Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1096-7184
Volume :
73
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Metabolic engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35643281
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymben.2022.05.007