| Literature DB >> 24831705 |
Simón Menendez-Bravo1, Santiago Comba1, Martín Sabatini1, Ana Arabolaza2, Hugo Gramajo3.
Abstract
Microbial fatty acid (FA)-derived molecules have emerged as promising alternatives to petroleum-based chemicals for reducing dependence on fossil hydrocarbons. However, native FA biosynthetic pathways often yield limited structural diversity, and therefore restricted physicochemical properties, of the end products by providing only a limited variety of usually linear hydrocarbons. Here we have engineered into Escherichia coli a mycocerosic polyketide synthase-based biosynthetic pathway from Mycobacterium tuberculosis and redefined its biological role towards the production of multi-methyl-branched-esters (MBEs) with novel chemical structures. Expression of FadD28, Mas and PapA5 enzymes enabled the biosynthesis of multi-methyl-branched-FA and their further esterification to an alcohol. The high substrate tolerance of these enzymes towards different FA and alcohol moieties resulted in the biosynthesis of a broad range of MBE. Further metabolic engineering of the MBE producer strain coupled this system to long-chain-alcohol biosynthetic pathways resulting in de novo production of branched wax esters following addition of only propionate.Entities:
Keywords: Branched fatty acid; Lipid metabolism; Metabolic engineering; Mycocerosic acid; Polyketide-derived molecules
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24831705 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2014.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metab Eng ISSN: 1096-7176 Impact factor: 9.783