| Literature DB >> 18684335 |
Beate Pscheidt1, Anton Glieder.
Abstract
This review gives an overview of different yeast strains and enzyme classes involved in yeast whole-cell biotransformations. A focus was put on the synthesis of compounds for fine chemical and API (= active pharmaceutical ingredient) production employing single or only few-step enzymatic reactions. Accounting for recent success stories in metabolic engineering, the construction and use of synthetic pathways was also highlighted. Examples from academia and industry and advances in the field of designed yeast strain construction demonstrate the broad significance of yeast whole-cell applications. In addition to Saccharomyces cerevisiae, alternative yeast whole-cell biocatalysts are discussed such as Candida sp., Cryptococcus sp., Geotrichum sp., Issatchenkia sp., Kloeckera sp., Kluyveromyces sp., Pichia sp. (including Hansenula polymorpha = P. angusta), Rhodotorula sp., Rhodosporidium sp., alternative Saccharomyces sp., Schizosaccharomyces pombe, Torulopsis sp., Trichosporon sp., Trigonopsis variabilis, Yarrowia lipolytica and Zygosaccharomyces rouxii.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18684335 PMCID: PMC2628649 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-7-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Figure 1Asymmetric reduction of ketones according to Prelog's Rule [44].
Industrial biotransformations [74] employing wild type yeast whole-cell biocatalysts ordered by E.C. numbers
| Alcohol NAD+ oxidoreductase (1.1.1.1) | LY 300164 = Benzodiazepine/ | Eli Lilly and Company, USA | ||
| Dehydrogenase, NADPH-dependent (1.1.X.X) | chiral β-hydroxy ester/ | Bristol-Myers Squibb, USA | ||
| Dehydrogenase (1.1.X.X) | ( | Merck & Co, Inc., USA | ||
| Reductase (1.1.X.X) | Ethyl-5-( | Bristol-Myers Squibb, USA | ||
| ( | Bristol-Myers Squibb, USA | |||
| D-Amino acid oxidase (1.4.3.3) | L-6-Hydroxynorleucine/ | Bristol-Myers Squibb, USA | ||
| Baker's yeast (= | Reductase (1.X.X.X) | Hoffmann La-Roche, CH | ||
| L-Lysine/ | Toray Industries Inc., Japan | |||
| Pyruvate decarboxylase (4.1.1.1) | PAC → ephedrine and pseudoephedrine/ | Krebs Biochemicals & Industries Ltd., India | ||
| Enoyl-CoA hydratase (4.2.1.17) | ( | Kanegafuchi Chemical Industries Co., Ltd., Japan | ||
| L-Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (4.3.1.5) | L-phenylalanine/ | Genex Corporation, USA | ||
aBacterial whole-cell biocatalyst. bIn this case, also engineered P. pastoris cells were employed. cACE = angiotensin-converting enzyme; NEP = neutral endopeptidase.
Examples of wild-type yeast whole-cell biocatalysts for the reduction of C=O bonds and comparison to S. cerevisiae, if provided.
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aconv. = conversion; bbaker's yeast from Distillerie Italiane, Eridania group; cSpanish type culture collection CECT, Valencia; dThe wild type strain S. cerevisiae Giv 2009 was from Givaudan Ltd. (Dübendorf, Switzerland); eorganic phase = Polypropylene glycol 1200 [63]; fSTY = space-time yield; calculated from t = 0 until t where the maximum product concentration was reached; gorganic phase = oleic acid [64].
Figure 2Enoate reductases perform the NAD(P)H-dependent, asymmetric bioreduction of activated C=C bonds. A cofactor recycling system is required for an economic process. Asterisks (*) indicate chiral centers, X depicts an activating group such as carbonyl-, carboxyl-, imide- or nitro-group [24,71].
Examples for one- to two step enzymatic reactions employing engineered yeast whole-cell biocatalysts (+ overexpression; - knockout/deletion).
| - β-keto reductase | 53% (90%) (slow, continuous substrate feed) | [ | |||||
| A: +Fasp, -Gre2p, -Ypr1pIV | A: | d: 78% (91% | [ | ||||
| B: -Fasp, +Gre2pIV | e: 26% (> 98% | ||||||
| a: R1 = Me; R3 = Me | B: | a: 76% (> 98% | |||||
| b: R1 = Et; R3 = Me | b: 85% (> 98% | ||||||
| c: R1 = Me; R3 = Et | c: 83% (> 98% | ||||||
| d: R1 = Et; R3 = Et | d: 87% (> 98% | ||||||
| e: R1 = | e: 90% (> 98% | ||||||
| A: - Gre2p, + Ypr1pIV | a: R2 = Me | A: | a: 90% (98% | [ | |||
| B: + Gre2P, - Ypr1pIV | b: R2 = Et | b: 89% (83% | |||||
| c: R2 = allyl | c: 92% (65% | ||||||
| d: R2 = propargyl | d: 75% (> 98% | ||||||
| B: | a: 86% (70% | ||||||
| b: 73% (67% | |||||||
| c: 67% (> 98% | |||||||
| d: 70% (> 98% | |||||||
| A: +Ymr226cIII | A: 72% (87%, | [ | |||||
| B: +Ara1pIII | R1 = Me; R2 = Me | B: 48% (91%, | |||||
| C: +Ypr1pIII | C: 62% (87%, | ||||||
| + reductase gene YDR368wV | 97% de | [ | |||||
| > 99% ee | |||||||
| 84% yield | |||||||
| + multiple copies of | a: R = H | a: 35% (> 99.9%, | [ | ||||
| b: R = Ph | b: 80% (> 99.9%, | ||||||
| c: R = | c: 76% (99.6%, | ||||||
| d: R = | d: 14% (> 99.9%, | ||||||
| e: R = | e: 74% (99.9%, | ||||||
| f: R = | f: 100% (99.4%, n.d.)VI | ||||||
| + | ~1 mg methyl benzoate per L of culture (with OD600 = 1), after 24 h | [ | |||||
| + | ~36% (> 98%) (theoretical yield: 50%) | [ | |||||
| + human CYP11B1-V78I | 2.5-fold higher activity compared with parental strain | [ | |||||
| + human CYP2D6 | 56% yield | [ | |||||
| + | Cephalosporin C | α-ketoadipyl-7-cephalosporanic acid and glutaryl-7-amino-cephalosporanic acid | 550 U/g CDW increased mechanical resistance | [ | |||
Icarbon source: glucose
IIcarbon source: galactose
IIIAra1p = S. cerevisiae reductase, NADPH-dependent; Ypr1p = S. cerevisiae reductase, NADPH-dependent; YMR226c = S. cerevisiae short chain dehydrogenase ORF [153].
IVFasp = S. cerevisiae fatty acid synthase; Gre2p = S. cerevisiae α-acetoxy ketone reductase; Ypr1p = S. cerevisiae aldo-keto reductase [152].
VS. cerevisiae 2-methylbutyraldehyde reductase (NCBI accession number: NP 010656)
VIWhole-cell bioreductions of α-keto esters (10 mM) under anaerobic conditions using 1 M ethanol as co-substrate; n.d. = not determined.
Examples for one step enzymatic reactions employing the designer yeast made by Stewart and coworkers [88,167-170], namely Saccharomyces cerevisiae overexpressing the Acinetobacter sp. NCIB 9871 cyclohexanone monooxygenase. The data is chronologically ordered.
| 1 | a: R = Me | a: 83% (≥ 98%) | [ | |||||
| b: R = Et | b: 74% (≥ 98%) | |||||||
| c: R = Pri | c: 60% (≥ 98%) | |||||||
| d: R = Pr | d: 63% (92%) | |||||||
| e: R = allyl | e: 62% (95%) | |||||||
| 1 | 2 | |||||||
| 2 | a: R = Me | a: | 50% (49%) | ---I | [ | |||
| b: R = Et | b: | 79% (95%) | 69% (≥ 98%) | |||||
| c: R = Pri | c: | 41% (≥ 98%) | 46% (96%) | |||||
| d: R = Pr | d: | 54% (97%) | 66% (92%) | |||||
| e: R = allyl | e: | 59% (≥ 98%) | 58% (≥ 98%) | |||||
| f. R = n-butyl | f: | 59% (≥ 98%) | 64% (98%) | |||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||||
| 3 | a: R = Me | a: | 71% (≥ 98%) | 60 % (≥ 98 %) | ---I | [ | ||
| b: R = Et | b: | 18% (70%) | 20% (70%) | ---I | ||||
| c: R = Pri | c: | N.R.II | ---I | N.R.II | ||||
| d: R = Pr | d: | 11% (≥ 98%) | ---I | 8% (83%) | ||||
| e: R = allyl | e: | 15% (97%) | ---I | 9.3% (≥ 98%) | ||||
| f. R = n-butyl | f: | 37% (56%) | ---I | 11% (84%) | ||||
| 1 | 2 | |||||||
| 4 | a: R = n-Bu | a: | 18% (≥ 98%) | 32% (≥ 98%) | [ | |||
| b: R = n-Hex | b: | 32% (≥ 98%) | 42% (≥ 98%) | |||||
| c: R = n-Oct | c: | 25% (≥ 98%) | 14% (≥ 98%) | |||||
| d: R = n- | d: | 39% (≥ 98%) | 37% (≥ 98%) | |||||
| C11H23 | ||||||||
| 1III | 2III | 3III | ||||||
| 5 | a: R = n-Pr | a: | 27% (13%) | -IV (33%) | -IV (60%) | [ | ||
| b: R = n-Hex | overall yield: 44%; ratio 2 : 3 = 83 : 17 | |||||||
| b: | 54% (29%) | (60%) | -IV | |||||
| overall yield: 20%; ratio 2 : 3 = > 99 : < 1 | ||||||||
| 6 | a: R = Ph | a: 95% (> 99%) | [ | |||||
| b: R = But | b: 47% (99%) | |||||||
| c: R = Bun | c: 53% (74%) | |||||||
| 7 | a: R1 = H | 1a: 18% (90%) (2a: 19% yield) | [ | |||||
| b: R1 = H | 1b: 30% (30%) (no sulfone 2b detected) | |||||||
| 8 | a: R1 = H | 1a: 20% (75%) [2a: 45% yield] | [ | |||||
| b: R1 = H | 1b: 16% (20%) [2b: 15% yield 76% ee] | |||||||
| c: R1 = H | 1c: 74% (20%) [no sulfone 2c detected] | |||||||
| 9 | R1 = CH3 | 1: 84% (48%) | [ | |||||
| R2 = CH3 | 2: 10% | |||||||
IThis isomer was not detected in the product mixture [168];
IIno oxidation detectable [168];
IIIdue to the low enantioselectivities of the reactions, no absolute configuration was assigned [170];
IVvalue not given [170].
Synthetic pathways based on isoprenoids, listed in chronological order
| 1) Introduction of the | galactose | [ | |||
| 2) Introduction of | [ | ||||
| [ | |||||
| 1) Introduction of synthetic, codon-optimized | glucose | [ | |||
| - Astaxanthin: | [ | ||||
| - β-Carotene: | |||||
| - Lycopene: | |||||
| 2) Improving Lycopene yields [ | [ | ||||
| 1) Transfer of expression cassettes for mature bovine adrenodoxin (ADX), adrenodoxin reductase (ADR), and side chain cleavage cytochrome P450 (P450scc) | galactose | 60 mg/L | [ | ||
| 2) Transfer of | |||||
| 3) Disruption of Δ22-sterol desaturase (one step of endogenous ergosterol biosynthetic pathway) | |||||
| 1) Transfer of expression cassettes for mature bovine adrenodoxin (ADX), adrenodoxin reductase (ADR), and side chain cleavage cytochrome P450 (P450scc) | galactose | No value given | [ | ||
| 2) Transfer of | |||||
| 3) Disruption of Δ22-sterol desaturase (one step of endogenous ergosterol biosynthetic pathway) | |||||
| 4) Introduction of type II human 3β-hydroxy-steroid dehydrogenase-isomerase (3β-HSD) | |||||
| 1) Rerouting the ergosterol biosynthesis pathway | glucose/ethanol | 11.5 mg/L | [ | ||
| 2) Introduction of the mammalian-specific part of the hydrocortisone biosynthetic pathway | |||||
| 3) Inactivation of side reactions to steroid biosynthesis dead ends | |||||
| 4) Adjusting expression levels for optimized steroid channeling to hydrocortisone | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the | galactose | 0.37 mg/L | [ | ||
| 2) Overexpression of a truncated Hydroxy-methylglutaryl CoA reductase (trHmg1p) | |||||
| 3) Mutation of the Upc2p transcription factor → introduction of the | |||||
| 4) Employing the | |||||
| 1) Introduction of five Taxol biosynthetic genes from | simple sugar (glucose, galactose) and [2-14C] mevalonic acid for radio-HPLC analysis | [ | |||
| 2) Due to restricted THY5a expression, only a very small amount of the intermediate taxadien-5α-ol and no taxadien-5α-acetoxy-10β-ol was detected | |||||
| 1) Engineering the farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) biosynthetic pathway | simple sugar | ~32 mg/L | [ | ||
| 2) Introduction of the | |||||
| 3) Cloning the | |||||
| 1) Follow-up study of [ | glucose | [ | |||
| 2) Engineering the pyruvate dehydrogenase bypass (pyruvate to acetyl-CoA) by overexpression of | |||||
| - | |||||
| - | |||||
| - In strain | |||||
| 3) Results: increased levels of mevalonate and amorpha-4,11-diene (~120 mg/L); generally applicable for isoprenoid production | |||||
Synthetic pathways for polyketide and flavonoid synthesis
| 1) Introduction of the | YPD (+ glucose) | 1.7 g/L (2-fold more than by natural host | [ | ||
| 2) Overexpression of the | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the | galactose minimal medium | > 200 mg/L for strain expressing the PPTaseII from | [ | ||
| 2) Introduction of the surfactin P-pantII transferase gene from | |||||
| 1) Introduction of pathways for methylmalonyl-coenzyme A production: | YPD (+ glucose) + propionate and propyl-diketide thioester feed | 0.5–1 mg/L with propionyl-CoA-dependent route (PCC-pathway) | [ | ||
| Propionyl-CoA-dependent route: | |||||
| + | |||||
| + | |||||
| Propionyl-CoA-independent route | |||||
| + | |||||
| 2) Expression of module 2 from DEBS1III linked to the thioesterase domain (TE) of DEBS3 [ | |||||
| 3) Co-expression of five tRNA genes E4, R2, L5, Q2 and P2 [ | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the | selective, synthetic medium supplemented with glucose and galactose, respectively | ~3–10 mg/L triple-expressing strains (PAL2/C4H/CPR2 and PAL4/C4H/CPR2, respectively; with slight advantages for the PAL2 expressing strain) | [ | ||
| + Phenylalanine ammonia lyase (isoform PAL2 and PAL4, respectively) | feed with [3H]phenylalanine [14C]cinnamate | ||||
| + Cinnamate 4-hydroxylase (C4H) | |||||
| + Cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR2) | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the | glucose or raffinose addition of L-phenylalanine (1.0 mM) | after 24 h: | [ | ||
| 2) Introduction of the | induction with galactose | on glucose: 354 μM (→ 58 mg/L) | |||
| on raffinose: 498 μM (→ 82 mg/L) | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the phenylpropanoid pathway: | YPD (+ glucose) and YPL (+ galactose) | [ | |||
| - | |||||
| - | |||||
| - | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the chalcone synthase (CHS) from ripe raspberry ( | YPGal-medium (induction with galactose) | raspberry fruit: 1–4 mg/kg | [ | ||
| 2) Introduction of the tobacco 4-coumarate-coenzyme A ligase (4CL) | addition of | recombinant | [ | ||
| recombinant | [ | ||||
| 1) Introduction of the coenzyme-A ligase | SCDL-medium (0.67% yeast nitrogen base, 0.8% glucose and required growth factors) with 10 mg/L | [ | |||
| 2) the resveratrol synthase (VST1) from grapevine ( | |||||
| 1) Introduction of the 4-coumarate: coenzyme A (CoA) ligase ( | 50 mL yeast nitrogen base medium supplemented with 5 mM | [ | |||
| 2) Introduction of the STS gene from | recomb. | ||||
IPKS = polyketide synthase; 6-MSAS = 6-methylsalicylic acid synthase
IIPPTase = P-pant transferase = 4'-phophopantetheinyl transferase
IIIDEBS = deoxyerythronolide B synthase from Saccharopolyspora erythraea, a typical 'modular' polyketide synthase.
Figure 3Overview of the biosynthetic pathway of farnesyl pyrophosphate – a pivotal intermediate for several essential pathways and various products [224]. Included is a schematic representation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase bypass whose engineering was shown to be effective for high-level isoprenoid production in S. cerevisiae [227].