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Improved NADPH supply for xylitol production by engineered Escherichia coli with glycolytic mutations

✍ Scribed by Jonathan W. Chin; Patrick C. Cirino


Publisher
American Institute of Chemical Engineers
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
224 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
8756-7938

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Escherichia coli engineered to uptake xylose while metabolizing glucose was previously shown to produce high levels of xylitol from a mixture of glucose and xylose when expressing NADPH‐dependent xylose reductase from Candida boidinii (CbXR) (Cirino et al., Biotechnol Bioeng. 2006;95:1167‐1176). We then described the effects of deletions of key metabolic pathways (e.g., Embden–Meyerhof–Parnas and pentose phosphate pathway) and reactions (e.g., transhydrogenase and NADH dehydrogenase) on resting‐cell xylitol yield (Y~RPG~: moles of xylitol produced per mole of glucose consumed) (Chin et al., Biotechnol Bioeng. 2009;102:209‐220). These prior results demonstrated the importance of direct NADPH supply by NADP^+^‐utilizing enzymes in central metabolism for driving heterologous NADPH‐dependent reactions. This study describes strain modifications that improve coupling between glucose catabolism (oxidation) and xylose reduction using two fundamentally different strategies. We first examined the effects of deleting the phosphofructokinase (pfk) gene(s) on growth‐uncoupled xylitol production and found that deleting both pfkA and sthA (encoding the __E. coli‐__soluble transhydrogenase) improved the xylitol Y~RPG~ from 3.4 ± 0.6 to 5.4 ± 0.4. The second strategy focused on coupling aerobic growth on glucose to xylitol production by deleting pgi (encoding phosphoglucose isomerase) and sthA. Impaired growth due to imbalanced NADPH metabolism (Sauer et al., J Biol Chem. 2004;279:6613‐6619) was alleviated upon expressing CbXR, resulting in xylitol production similar to that of the growth‐uncoupled precursor strains but with much less acetate secretion and more efficient utilization of glucose. Intracellular nicotinamide cofactor levels were also quantified, and the magnitude of the change in the NADPH/NADP^+^ ratio measured from cells consuming glucose in the absence vs. presence of xylose showed a strong correlation to the resulting Y~RPG~. © 2011 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2011


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Analysis of NADPH supply during xylitol
✍ Jonathan W. Chin; Reza Khankal; Caroline A. Monroe; Costas D. Maranas; Patrick C 📂 Article 📅 2009 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 259 KB 👁 2 views

## Abstract __Escherichia coli__ strain PC09 (Δ__xylB__, cAMP‐independent CRP (__crp__\*) mutant) expressing an NADPH‐dependent xylose reductase from __Candida boidinii__ (CbXR) was previously reported to produce xylitol from xylose while metabolizing glucose [Cirino et al. (2006) Biotechnol Bioeng