| Literature DB >> 27654918 |
Adam L Meadows1, Kristy M Hawkins1, Yoseph Tsegaye1, Eugene Antipov1, Youngnyun Kim1, Lauren Raetz1, Robert H Dahl1, Anna Tai1, Tina Mahatdejkul-Meadows1, Lan Xu1, Lishan Zhao1, Madhukar S Dasika1, Abhishek Murarka1, Jacob Lenihan1, Diana Eng1, Joshua S Leng1, Chi-Li Liu1, Jared W Wenger1, Hanxiao Jiang1, Lily Chao1, Patrick Westfall1, Jefferson Lai1, Savita Ganesan1, Peter Jackson1, Robert Mans1, Darren Platt1, Christopher D Reeves1, Poonam R Saija1, Gale Wichmann1, Victor F Holmes1, Kirsten Benjamin1, Paul W Hill1, Timothy S Gardner1, Annie E Tsong1.
Abstract
A bio-based economy has the potential to provide sustainable substitutes for petroleum-based products and new chemical building blocks for advanced materials. We previously engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae for industrial production of the isoprenoid artemisinic acid for use in antimalarial treatments. Adapting these strains for biosynthesis of other isoprenoids such as β-farnesene (C15H24), a plant sesquiterpene with versatile industrial applications, is straightforward. However, S. cerevisiae uses a chemically inefficient pathway for isoprenoid biosynthesis, resulting in yield and productivity limitations incompatible with commodity-scale production. Here we use four non-native metabolic reactions to rewire central carbon metabolism in S. cerevisiae, enabling biosynthesis of cytosolic acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA, the two-carbon isoprenoid precursor) with a reduced ATP requirement, reduced loss of carbon to CO2-emitting reactions, and improved pathway redox balance. We show that strains with rewired central metabolism can devote an identical quantity of sugar to farnesene production as control strains, yet produce 25% more farnesene with that sugar while requiring 75% less oxygen. These changes lower feedstock costs and dramatically increase productivity in industrial fermentations which are by necessity oxygen-constrained. Despite altering key regulatory nodes, engineered strains grow robustly under taxing industrial conditions, maintaining stable yield for two weeks in broth that reaches >15% farnesene by volume. This illustrates that rewiring yeast central metabolism is a viable strategy for cost-effective, large-scale production of acetyl-CoA-derived molecules.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27654918 DOI: 10.1038/nature19769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962