| Literature DB >> 27565672 |
Min-Kyoung Kang1, Jens Nielsen2,3,4.
Abstract
Advancement in metabolic engineering of microorganisms has enabled bio-based production of a range of chemicals, and such engineered microorganism can be used for sustainable production leading to reduced carbon dioxide emission there. One area that has attained much interest is microbial hydrocarbon biosynthesis, and in particular, alkanes and alkenes are important high-value chemicals as they can be utilized for a broad range of industrial purposes as well as 'drop-in' biofuels. Some microorganisms have the ability to biosynthesize alkanes and alkenes naturally, but their production level is extremely low. Therefore, there have been various attempts to recruit other microbial cell factories for production of alkanes and alkenes by applying metabolic engineering strategies. Here we review different pathways and involved enzymes for alkane and alkene production and discuss bottlenecks and possible solutions to accomplish industrial level production of these chemicals by microbial fermentation.Entities:
Keywords: Alkanes/alkenes; Cell factories; Fatty acid biosynthesis; Metabolic engineering; TRY (titer, rate, and yield)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27565672 PMCID: PMC5408033 DOI: 10.1007/s10295-016-1814-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 1367-5435 Impact factor: 3.346
Fig. 1Alkane/alkene biosynthetic pathways and enzymes, which were utilized in previous reports. a Conversion of fatty aldehydes to alkanes/alkenes by AD enzymes, CER (plant), CYP4G (insects), and ADO (cyanobacteria), b terminal alkene production by decarboxylation enzymes, OleT, UndA, and UndB, c internal alkene biosynthesis by head-to-head hydrocarbon biosynthetic enzyme, OleABCD, d alkene production by PKS pathway enzymes, Ols and SgcE-SgcE10
Examples of alkane/alkene production by metabolically engineered microorganisms
| Enzyme | Strain | Products | Titer | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAR-AD |
| Alkanes (C15, C17) | 7.7 mg/L | [ |
|
| Alkanes (C15, C17), Alkene (C17) | 255.6 mg/L | [ | |
|
| Alkanes (C15, C17) | 300 mg/L | [ | |
|
| Alkanes (C9, C12, C13, C14), Alkene (C13) | 580.8 mg/L | [ | |
|
| Alkanes (C13, C15, C17) | 22 μg/g of DW | [ | |
|
| Alkanes (C27–C31) | 86 μg/g of DW | [ | |
|
| Alkanes (C13, C15, C17), Alkenes (C15, C17) | 0.82 mg/L | [ | |
|
| Alkanes (C15, C17), Alkene (C17) | 26 mg/L | [ | |
| FAR-AD |
| Alkanes (C13, iso-C13, C15, iso-C15, C16, C17), Alkenes (C13, C15, C16, C17) | 5 mg/L | [ |
| CAR-AD |
| Alkanes (C11, C13), Alkenes (C15, C17) | 2 mg/L | [ |
| DOX-AD |
| Alkanes (C14, C16) | 73. 5 μg/L | [ |
| OleT |
| Alkenes (C11, C13, C15, C15:2, C17:2) | 97.6 mg/L | [ |
|
| Alkenes (C11–C19) | 3.7 mg/L | [ | |
| UndA |
| Alkenes (C9–C13) | 6 mg/L | [ |
| UndB |
| Alkenes (C5–C17) | 55 mg/L | [ |
| OleABCD |
| Alkenes (27:3, 27:2, 29:2, 29:3) | 40 μg/L | [ |
| Ols |
| Alkenes (C19, C19:2) | 4.2 mg/L/OD730 | [ |
|
| Alkene (15:7) | 129.3 mg/L | [ | |
|
| Alkene (C15) | 140 mg/L | [ |