Literature DB >> 34314893

Cascaded valorization of brown seaweed to produce l-lysine and value-added products using Corynebacterium glutamicum streamlined by systems metabolic engineering.

Sarah Lisa Hoffmann1, Michael Kohlstedt1, Lukas Jungmann1, Michael Hutter2, Ignacio Poblete-Castro3, Judith Becker1, Christoph Wittmann4.   

Abstract

Seaweeds emerge as promising third-generation renewable for sustainable bioproduction. In the present work, we valorized brown seaweed to produce l-lysine, the world's leading feed amino acid, using Corynebacterium glutamicum, which was streamlined by systems metabolic engineering. The mutant C. glutamicum SEA-1 served as a starting point for development because it produced small amounts of l-lysine from mannitol, a major seaweed sugar, because of the deletion of its arabitol repressor AtlR and its engineered l-lysine pathway. Starting from SEA-1, we systematically optimized the microbe to redirect excess NADH, formed on the sugar alcohol, towards NADPH, required for l-lysine synthesis. The mannitol dehydrogenase variant MtlD D75A, inspired by 3D protein homology modelling, partly generated NADPH during the oxidation of mannitol to fructose, leading to a 70% increased l-lysine yield in strain SEA-2C. Several rounds of strain engineering further increased NADPH supply and l-lysine production. The best strain, SEA-7, overexpressed the membrane-bound transhydrogenase pntAB together with codon-optimized gapN, encoding NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and mak, encoding fructokinase. In a fed-batch process, SEA-7 produced 76 g L-1l-lysine from mannitol at a yield of 0.26 mol mol-1 and a maximum productivity of 2.1 g L-1 h-1. Finally, SEA-7 was integrated into seaweed valorization cascades. Aqua-cultured Laminaria digitata, a major seaweed for commercial alginate, was extracted and hydrolyzed enzymatically, followed by recovery and clean-up of pure alginate gum. The residual sugar-based mixture was converted to l-lysine at a yield of 0.27 C-mol C-mol-1 using SEA-7. Second, stems of the wild-harvested seaweed Durvillaea antarctica, obtained as waste during commercial processing of the blades for human consumption, were extracted using acid treatment. Fermentation of the hydrolysate using SEA-7 provided l-lysine at a yield of 0.40 C-mol C-mol-1. Our findings enable improvement of the efficiency of seaweed biorefineries using tailor-made C. glutamicum strains.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Fructokinase; Fructose; Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase; L-lysine; Macro algae; Mannitol 2-dehydrogenase; NADH; NADPH; Oxidative pentose phosphate pathway; Protein engineering; Redox balancing; Seaweed; Transhydrogenase

Year:  2021        PMID: 34314893     DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2021.07.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Metab Eng        ISSN: 1096-7176            Impact factor:   9.783


  3 in total

1.  An NADPH-auxotrophic Corynebacterium glutamicum recombinant strain and used it to construct L-leucine high-yielding strain.

Authors:  Sheng-Ling Chen; Ting-Shan Liu; Wei-Guo Zhang; Jian-Zhong Xu
Journal:  Int Microbiol       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 3.097

2.  CRISPR-assisted rational flux-tuning and arrayed CRISPRi screening of an L-proline exporter for L-proline hyperproduction.

Authors:  Jiao Liu; Moshi Liu; Tuo Shi; Guannan Sun; Ning Gao; Xiaojia Zhao; Xuan Guo; Xiaomeng Ni; Qianqian Yuan; Jinhui Feng; Zhemin Liu; Yanmei Guo; Jiuzhou Chen; Yu Wang; Ping Zheng; Jibin Sun
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 17.694

3.  Improvement in L-ornithine production from mannitol via transcriptome-guided genetic engineering in Corynebacterium glutamicum.

Authors:  Libin Nie; Yutong He; Lirong Hu; Xiangdong Zhu; Xiaoyu Wu; Bin Zhang
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod       Date:  2022-09-19
  3 in total

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