| Literature DB >> 32399750 |
Dong Li1,2, Huan Fang2,3, Yuanming Gai2,3, Jing Zhao2,3, Pingtao Jiang2,3, Lei Wang1, Qun Wei4, Dayu Yu5, Dawei Zhang6,7,8.
Abstract
Vitamin B12 is a crucial fine chemical that is widely used in the pharmaceutical, food and chemical industries, and its production solely dependents on microbial fermentation. We previously constructed an artificial vitamin B12 biosynthesis pathway in Escherichia coli, but the yield of the engineered strains was low. Here, we removed metabolic bottlenecks of the vitamin B12 biosynthesis pathway in engineered E. coli strains. After screening cobB genes from different sources, optimizing the expression of cobN and customizing the ribosome binding sites of cobS and cobT, the vitamin B12 yield increased to 152.29 μg/g dry cell weight (DCW). Optimization of the downstream module, which converts co(II)byrinic acid a,c-diamide into adenosylcobinamide phosphate, elevated the vitamin B12 yield to 249.04 μg/g DCW. A comparison of a variety of equivalent components indicated that glucose and corn steep liquor are optimal carbon and nitrogen sources, respectively. Finally, an orthogonal array design was applied to determine the optimal concentrations of glucose and nitrogen sources including corn steep liquor and yeast extract, through which a vitamin B12 yield of 530.29 μg/g DCW was obtained. The metabolic modifications and optimization of fermentation conditions achieved in this study offer a basis for further improving vitamin B12 production in E. coli and will hopefully accelerate its industrial application.Entities:
Keywords: Escherichia coli; Metabolic engineering; Orthogonal experimental design; Vitamin B12
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32399750 DOI: 10.1007/s00449-020-02355-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioprocess Biosyst Eng ISSN: 1615-7591 Impact factor: 3.210