| Literature DB >> 34946060 |
Divakar Dahiya1, Jemima V Manuel2, Poonam Singh Nigam3.
Abstract
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is an important chemical compound in the human brain. GABA acts as an inhibitory neurotransmitter by inducing hyperpolarization of cellular membranes. Usually, this pharmaceutically important compound is synthesized using a chemical process, but in this short overview we have only analysed microbial processes, which have been studied for the biosynthesis of this commercially important compound. The content of this article includes the following summarised information: the search for biological processes showed a number of lactic acid bacteria and certain species of fungi, which could be effectively used for the production of GABA. Strains found to possess GABA-producing pathways include Lactobacillus brevis CRL 1942, L. plantarum FNCC 260, Streptococcus salivarius subsp. thermophilus Y2, Bifidobacterium strains, Monascus spp., and Rhizopus spp. Each of these strains required specific growth conditions. However, several factors were common among these strains, such as the use of two main supplements in their fermentation medium-monosodium glutamate and pyridoxal phosphate-and maintaining an acidic pH. Optimization studies of GABA production were comprised of altering the media constituents, modifying growth conditions, types of cultivation system, and genetic manipulation. Some strains increased the production of GABA under anaerobic conditions. Genetic manipulation focused on silencing some genes or overexpression of gadB and gadC. The conclusion, based on the review of information available in published research, is that the targeted manipulation of selected microorganisms, as well as the culture conditions for an optimised bioprocess, should be adopted for an increased production of GABA to meet its increasing demand for food and pharmaceutical applications.Entities:
Keywords: biosynthesis; gamma-aminobutyric acid; genetic-engineering; immobilization; microorganisms; monosodium-glutamate
Year: 2021 PMID: 34946060 PMCID: PMC8704203 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9122457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Commercial GABA Products Available in Market **.
| Brand Names | Form of Supplements | Route of Synthesis (Microbial/Chemical) | Commercial Producers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Now supplements | 500 mg capsules | not known | Vitamin Angels |
| Double Wood Supplements | 1000 mg capsules | not known | Double Wood Supplements |
| Natural source GABA | Gelatin capsules | not known | Pure Organic Ingredients |
| Horbäach GABA | 500–1000 mg capsules | not known | Horbäach |
| GABA calm | Tablet | not known | Source Naturals |
| Liposomal GABA | Liquids | not known | Quicksilver Scientifics |
| Amazing Formulas GABA | 500–1000 mg GABA | not known | Amazing and Nutrition |
** Information sourced from: https://www.amazon.com/gaba/s?k=gaba (accessed on 26 November 2021).
Figure 1The biosynthesis production process, a non-essential amino acid glutamate is readily decarboxylated to GABA, catalysed by an enzyme glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), EC 4.1.1.15.
Selected Microbial Systems and Their Requirements for the Synthesis of GABA.
| Microorganisms Employed in Bioprocess | Yield of GABA, or Product | Requirements | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50 mM after 96 h | MSG 53 mM | [ | |
| 23.6 g/L at 36 h in batch fermentation 31.3 g/L at 57 h in fed batch fermentation | Engineered MSG pathway | [ | |
| 223 mM after 48 h of fermentation | 534 mM MSG; | [ | |
| 7984.75 ± 293.33 mg/L at 48 h | PLP 0.02 mmol/L | [ | |
| 5.4 g/L; | 1 g/L skim milk powder, or yeast extract or soy protein hydrolysate | [ | |
| MRS, 1% MSG, 0.05% cysteine. 37 °C | [ | ||
| 15.53 mg/gm dry substrate (20 days solid-state fermentation). | Wheat powder, potato dextrose, magnesium sulfate, peptone, 30 °C. | [ | |
| 945.3 mg/L at 108 h | MSG, MRS medium | [ | |
|
| 540 mg/kg (50 h) | Quinoa, soybeans | [ |
| 2.771 kg/L with average molar conversion rate of 67% in 20 h by glutamate decarboxylation of MSG/L-glutamic acid | GAD from Streptomyces; engineered | [ | |
| 22.57 ± 1.24–30.18 ± 1.33 g L⁻¹ | [ | ||
| Bioactive yogurt enriched with 2 mg/mL GABA produced in fermentation | 14% ( | [ | |
| 11.09 mM in 60 h; | GAD enzyme; 497.973 mM glutamic acid, 36 °C, pH 5.31 | [ | |
| 19.8 g/L | 100 g/L yeast extract, 10 g/L glucose, 2.25% MSG | [ | |
| Probiotic bacterial strains | Development of functional food products | Co-encapsulation of bacterial cells with bioactive compound in a single matrix | [ |
| Lactic acid bacteria | Microcapsules of LAB and GABA for targeted intestinal delivery in functional food formulations | Dextran, whey protein, multilayer co-encapsulation, two-stage ultrasonication | [ |
| Multifunctional food microcapsules containing GABA, probiotics, and prebiotics | Matrix of exo-polysaccharides dextran, inulin, maltodextrin | [ | |
|
| Rice vinegar MSG with food-grade γ-aminobutyric acid | Immobilized enzyme GAD from | [ |
| Yield 5.15 g/L; productivity 3.09 g/L per hour | GAD molecular cloning, expression, immobilization | [ | |
| 43.65 g/L at 98.42% GABA conversion rate | Glucose yeast extract peptone medium, engineering of bacterial cells for physiology orientation | [ | |
| 25.61 g/L | 50 °C, pH 4.7 genetic engineering of | [ | |
| 104.38 ± 3.47 g/L | Overexpression of GAD isoforms of GAD, | [ | |
| 90% activity; | MSG 1.3 mg/mL, NaCl 2%, | [ | |
| 4.83 mM of GABA; grape beverage as a functional drink; dermatological application | grape must, addition of | [ | |
| 1005.81 ± 47.88 mM, | 30–35 °C, 5.0 and 250–500 mM glutamate | [ | |
| 62,523 mg/L, | 1% glucose; 2.5% yeast extract; 2 ppm CaCO₃, MnSO₄, Tween 80; 10 μM PLP, 650 mM MSG | [ | |
| 205.8 ± 8.0 g/L | 295 g/L glutamic acid, 25 g/L each glucose and yeast extract; 25 mg/L MnSO4·H2O; 2 g/L Tween-80; 32 °C | [ |