| Literature DB >> 31367232 |
Minsuk Kim1,2, Beom Gi Park3,4, Eun-Jung Kim4,5, Joonwon Kim3,4, Byung-Gee Kim3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Yarrowia lipolytica, an oleaginous yeast, is a promising platform strain for production of biofuels and oleochemicals as it can accumulate a high level of lipids in response to nitrogen limitation. Accordingly, many metabolic engineering efforts have been made to develop engineered strains of Y. lipolytica with higher lipid yields. Genome-scale model of metabolism (GEM) is a powerful tool for identifying novel genetic designs for metabolic engineering. Several GEMs for Y. lipolytica have recently been developed; however, not many applications of the GEMs have been reported for actual metabolic engineering of Y. lipolytica. The major obstacle impeding the application of Y. lipolytica GEMs is the lack of proper methods for predicting phenotypes of the cells in the nitrogen-limited condition, or more specifically in the stationary phase of a batch culture.Entities:
Keywords: Genome-scale modeling; Lipid; Metabolic engineering; Non-conventional yeast; Systems biology; TAG; Yarrowia lipolytica; eMOMA
Year: 2019 PMID: 31367232 PMCID: PMC6657051 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-019-1518-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1Geometric illustration of the eMOMA method. Red-colored area represents a solution space of flux vectors which can support maximum specific growth rate, while blue-colored area represents a solution space of flux vectors for nutrient-limited conditions. Upon nutrient starvation, the cells cannot retain a flux vector selected by pFBA and should adjust their fluxes from the red-colored area to the blue-colored area. eMOMA assumes that the cells try to minimize the metabolic adjustments in response to environmental perturbations (represented by black perpendicular dotted lines). Illustrations for a wild-type and b mutant situations are provided
Fig. 2Exchange fluxes for non-limited, nitrogen-limited and phosphate-limited conditions predicted by eMOMA. Predicted exchange fluxes for non-limited, nitrogen-limited and phosphate-limited conditions are shown by black, light gray, and dark gray, respectively. eMOMA was used for predicting fluxes for nitrogen-limited and phosphate-limited conditions while pFBA was used for predicting fluxes for the non-limited condition. Arrows indicate constraints specifying the limiting nutrients for each condition
Fig. 3Comparison of fluxes estimated by 13C-MFA and fluxes predicted by eMOMA. The fluxes for nitrogen-limited conditions estimated by 13C-MFA (best-fit fluxes for MTYL037 strain calculated using an MFA model without cytosolic malic enzyme reaction) [46] and predicted by eMOMA have been compared. All fluxes are normalized to glucose uptake rate of 1
Top ten overexpression targets for increasing lipid production predicted by eMOMA-based design method
| Reaction abbreviation | Reaction description | EC number | Genes associated | Predicted yield improvement (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CITtam | Citrate/malate antiporter (mitochondrial) | n/a | YALI0F26323g | 78.7 |
| TRIGSY_GLC | Diglyceride acyltransferase | EC 2.3.1.20 | (YALI0E16797g or YALI0E32769g) | 74.0 |
| ACCOACr | Acetyl-CoA carboxylase | EC 6.4.1.2 | YALI0C11407g | 67.7 |
| FAS | Fatty acyl-CoA synthase ( | EC 2.3.1.86 | (YALI0B15059g and YALI0B19382g and YALI0C11407g and YALI0E23185g) | 38.9–56.7 |
| CSm | Citrate synthase (mitochondrial) | EC 2.3.3.1 | (YALI0E00638g or YALI0E02684g) | 55.6 |
| DESAT18 | Stearoyl-CoA desaturase | EC 1.14.19.1 | YALI0C05951g | 35.4 |
| ATPCitL | ATP:citrate lyase | EC 2.3.3.8 | (YALI0E34793g and YALI0D24431g) | 27.9 |
| HSDxi | Homoserine dehydrogenase (NADH) | EC 1.1.1.3 | YALI0D01089g | 21.0 |
| ASADi | Aspartate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase | EC 1.2.1.11 | YALI0D13596g | 21.0 |
| ASPKi | Aspartate kinase | EC 2.7.2.4 | YALI0D11704g | 21.0 |
Top ten knockout targets for increasing lipid production predicted by eMOMA-based design method
| Reaction abbreviation | Reaction description | EC number | Genes associated | Predicted yield improvement (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MTHFC | Methenyltetrahydrofolate cyclohydrolase | EC 3.5.4.9 | (YALI0F30745g and YALI0E01056g) | 57.1 |
| FTHFL | Formate-tetrahydrofolate ligase | EC 6.3.4.3 | (YALI0E01056g and YALI0F30745g) | 51.9 |
| MTHFD | Methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase (NADP+) | EC 1.5.1.5 | (YALI0F30745g and YALI0E01056g) | 51.1 |
| ALPHNH | Allophanate hydrolase | EC 3.5.1.54 | YALI0E07271g | 50.9 |
| UREASE | Urea carboxylase | EC 6.3.4.6 | YALI0E07271g | 50.9 |
| ARGN | Arginase | EC 3.5.3.1 | YALI0E07535g | 50.9 |
| ERGSTt | Ergosterol reversible transport (extracellular) | n/a | YALI0F17996g | 48.0 |
| GHMT2r | Glycine hydroxymethyltransferase | EC 2.1.2.1 | (YALI0D22484g and YALI0E16346g) | 15.5 |
| IPPSm | 2-Isopropylmalate synthase (mitochondrial) | EC 2.3.3.13 | YALI0B07447g | 10.7 |
| ICDHym | Isocitrate dehydrogenase (NADP+, mitochondrial) | EC 1.1.1.42 | YALI0F04095g | 9.3 |
Fig. 4Growth and lipid accumulation profiles of knockout mutants. Batch culture of wild-type and knockout mutants was conducted using CN75 medium for 3 days. Circle, triangle, and rectangular represent wild-type, YALI0E07271g, and YALI0F30745g knockout mutants, respectively. Growth (a) and lipid content (b) curves were obtained with biological replicates