Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Systems Engineering, Washington State University, L. J. Smith Hall, Pullman, WA 99164, USA
Abstract
High production cost is one of the major factors that limit the market growth of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) as a biopolymer. Improving PHA synthesis performance and utilizing low-grade feedstocks are two logical strategies for reducing costs. As an oleaginous yeast, Y. lipolytica has a high carbon flux through acetyl-CoA (the main PHB precursor), which makes it a desired cell factory for PHB biosynthesis. In the current study, two different metabolic pathways (NBC and ABC) were introduced into Y. lipolytica PO1f for synthesizing PHB. Compared to the ABC pathway, the NBC pathway, which includes NphT7 to redirect the lipogenesis pathway and catalyze acetoacetyl-CoA synthesis in a more energy-favored reaction, led to PHB accumulation of up to 11% of cell dry weight (CDW), whereas the ABC pathway resulted in non-detectable accumulations of PHB. Further modifications of the strain with the NBC pathway through peroxisomal compartmentalization and gene dose overexpression reached 41% PHB of CDW and a growth rate of 0.227 h−1. A low growth rate was observed with acetate as the sole source of carbon and energy or glucose as the sole substrate at high concentrations. Using a co-substrate strategy helped overcoming the inhibitory and toxic effects of both substrates. Cultivating the engineered strain in the optimal co-substrate condition predicted by response surface methodology (RSM) led to 83.4 g/L of biomass concentration and 31.7 g/L of PHB. These results offer insight into a more cost-effective production of PHB with engineered Y. lipolytica.
Funder
USDA NIFA Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program
Subject
Plant Science,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Food Science
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