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Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity

BACKGROUND: Increasing global demand and reliance on petroleum-derived chemicals will necessitate alternative sources for chemical feedstocks. Currently, 99% of chemical feedstocks are derived from petroleum and natural gas. Renewable methods for producing important chemical feedstocks largely remai...

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Autores principales: Rodriguez, Gabriel M, Atsumi, Shota
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3439341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22731523
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-11-90
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author Rodriguez, Gabriel M
Atsumi, Shota
author_facet Rodriguez, Gabriel M
Atsumi, Shota
author_sort Rodriguez, Gabriel M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Increasing global demand and reliance on petroleum-derived chemicals will necessitate alternative sources for chemical feedstocks. Currently, 99% of chemical feedstocks are derived from petroleum and natural gas. Renewable methods for producing important chemical feedstocks largely remain unaddressed. Synthetic biology enables the renewable production of various chemicals from microorganisms by constructing unique metabolic pathways. Here, we engineer Escherichia coli for the production of isobutyraldehyde, which can be readily converted to various hydrocarbons currently derived from petroleum such as isobutyric acid, acetal, oxime and imine using existing chemical catalysis. Isobutyraldehyde can be readily stripped from cultures during production, which reduces toxic effects of isobutyraldehyde. RESULTS: We adopted the isobutanol pathway previously constructed in E. coli, neglecting the last step in the pathway where isobutyraldehyde is converted to isobutanol. However, this strain still overwhelmingly produced isobutanol (1.5 g/L/OD(600) (isobutanol) vs 0.14 g/L/OD(600) (isobutyraldehyde)). Next, we deleted yqhD which encodes a broad-substrate range aldehyde reductase known to be active toward isobutyraldehyde. This strain produced isobutanol and isobutyraldehyde at a near 1:1 ratio, indicating further native isobutyraldehyde reductase (IBR) activity in E. coli. To further eliminate isobutanol formation, we set out to identify and remove the remaining IBRs from the E. coli genome. We identified 7 annotated genes coding for IBRs that could be active toward isobutyraldehyde: adhP, eutG, yiaY, yjgB, betA, fucO, eutE. Individual deletions of the genes yielded only marginal improvements. Therefore, we sequentially deleted all seven of the genes and assessed production. The combined deletions greatly increased isobutyraldehyde production (1.5 g/L/OD(600)) and decreased isobutanol production (0.4 g/L/OD(600)). By assessing production by overexpression of each candidate IBR, we reveal that AdhP, EutG, YjgB, and FucO are active toward isobutyraldehyde. Finally, we assessed long-term isobutyraldehyde production of our best strain containing a total of 15 gene deletions using a gas stripping system with in situ product removal, resulting in a final titer of 35 g/L after 5 days. CONCLUSIONS: In this work, we optimized E. coli for the production of the important chemical feedstock isobutyraldehyde by the removal of IBRs. Long-term production yielded industrially relevant titers of isobutyraldehyde with in situ product removal. The mutational load imparted on E. coli in this work demonstrates the versatility of metabolic engineering for strain improvements.
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spelling pubmed-34393412012-09-12 Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity Rodriguez, Gabriel M Atsumi, Shota Microb Cell Fact Research BACKGROUND: Increasing global demand and reliance on petroleum-derived chemicals will necessitate alternative sources for chemical feedstocks. Currently, 99% of chemical feedstocks are derived from petroleum and natural gas. Renewable methods for producing important chemical feedstocks largely remain unaddressed. Synthetic biology enables the renewable production of various chemicals from microorganisms by constructing unique metabolic pathways. Here, we engineer Escherichia coli for the production of isobutyraldehyde, which can be readily converted to various hydrocarbons currently derived from petroleum such as isobutyric acid, acetal, oxime and imine using existing chemical catalysis. Isobutyraldehyde can be readily stripped from cultures during production, which reduces toxic effects of isobutyraldehyde. RESULTS: We adopted the isobutanol pathway previously constructed in E. coli, neglecting the last step in the pathway where isobutyraldehyde is converted to isobutanol. However, this strain still overwhelmingly produced isobutanol (1.5 g/L/OD(600) (isobutanol) vs 0.14 g/L/OD(600) (isobutyraldehyde)). Next, we deleted yqhD which encodes a broad-substrate range aldehyde reductase known to be active toward isobutyraldehyde. This strain produced isobutanol and isobutyraldehyde at a near 1:1 ratio, indicating further native isobutyraldehyde reductase (IBR) activity in E. coli. To further eliminate isobutanol formation, we set out to identify and remove the remaining IBRs from the E. coli genome. We identified 7 annotated genes coding for IBRs that could be active toward isobutyraldehyde: adhP, eutG, yiaY, yjgB, betA, fucO, eutE. Individual deletions of the genes yielded only marginal improvements. Therefore, we sequentially deleted all seven of the genes and assessed production. The combined deletions greatly increased isobutyraldehyde production (1.5 g/L/OD(600)) and decreased isobutanol production (0.4 g/L/OD(600)). By assessing production by overexpression of each candidate IBR, we reveal that AdhP, EutG, YjgB, and FucO are active toward isobutyraldehyde. Finally, we assessed long-term isobutyraldehyde production of our best strain containing a total of 15 gene deletions using a gas stripping system with in situ product removal, resulting in a final titer of 35 g/L after 5 days. CONCLUSIONS: In this work, we optimized E. coli for the production of the important chemical feedstock isobutyraldehyde by the removal of IBRs. Long-term production yielded industrially relevant titers of isobutyraldehyde with in situ product removal. The mutational load imparted on E. coli in this work demonstrates the versatility of metabolic engineering for strain improvements. BioMed Central 2012-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3439341/ /pubmed/22731523 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-11-90 Text en Copyright ©2012 Rodriguez and Atsumi; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Rodriguez, Gabriel M
Atsumi, Shota
Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
title Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
title_full Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
title_fullStr Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
title_full_unstemmed Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
title_short Isobutyraldehyde production from Escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
title_sort isobutyraldehyde production from escherichia coli by removing aldehyde reductase activity
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3439341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22731523
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-11-90
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