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1.
Metab Eng ; 75: 110-118, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36494025

ABSTRACT

Medium-chain-length fatty alcohols have broad applications in the surfactant, lubricant, and cosmetic industries. Their acetate esters are widely used as flavoring and fragrance substances. Pseudomonas putida KT2440 is a promising chassis for fatty alcohol and ester production at the industrial scale due to its robustness, versatility, and high oxidative capacity. However, P. putida has also numerous native alcohol dehydrogenases, which lead to the degradation of these alcohols and thereby hinder its use as an effective biocatalyst. Therefore, to harness its capacity as a producer, we constructed two engineered strains (WTΔpedFΔadhP, GN346ΔadhP) incapable of growing on mcl-fatty alcohols by deleting either a cytochrome c oxidase PedF and a short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase AdhP in P. putida or AdhP in P. putida GN346. Carboxylic acid reductase, phosphopantetheinyl transferase, and alcohol acetyltransferase were expressed in the engineered P. putida strains to produce hexyl acetate. Overexpression of transporters further increased 1-hexanol and hexyl acetate production. The optimal strain G23E-MPAscTP produced 93.8 mg/L 1-hexanol and 160.5 mg/L hexyl acetate, with a yield of 63.1%. The engineered strain is applicable for C6-C10 fatty alcohols and their acetate ester production. This study lays a foundation for P. putida being used as a microbial cell factory for sustainable synthesis of a broad range of products based on medium-chain-length fatty alcohols.


Subject(s)
Pseudomonas putida , Pseudomonas putida/genetics , Pseudomonas putida/metabolism , Fatty Acids/genetics , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Metabolic Engineering , Esters/metabolism , Fatty Alcohols/metabolism , Acetates/metabolism
2.
Biotechnol Biofuels ; 14(1): 218, 2021 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34801079

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Medium-chain-length α,ω-diols (mcl-diols) are important building blocks in polymer production. Recently, microbial mcl-diol production from alkanes was achieved in E. coli (albeit at low rates) using the alkane monooxygenase system AlkBGTL and esterification module Atf1. Owing to its remarkable versatility and conversion capabilities and hence potential for enabling an economically viable process, we assessed whether the industrially robust P. putida can be a suitable production organism of mcl-diols. RESULTS: AlkBGTL and Atf1 were successfully expressed as was shown by oxidation of alkanes to alkanols, and esterification to alkyl acetates. However, the conversion rate was lower than that by E. coli, and not fully to diols. The conversion was improved by using citrate instead of glucose as energy source, indicating that carbon catabolite repression plays a role. By overexpressing the activator of AlkBGTL-Atf1, AlkS and deleting Crc or CyoB, key genes in carbon catabolite repression of P. putida increased diacetoxyhexane production by 76% and 65%, respectively. Removing Crc/Hfq attachment sites of mRNAs resulted in the highest diacetoxyhexane production. When the intermediate hexyl acetate was used as substrate, hexanol was detected. This indicated that P. putida expressed esterases, hampering accumulation of the corresponding esters and diesters. Sixteen putative esterase genes present in P. putida were screened and tested. Among them, Est12/K was proven to be the dominant one. Deletion of Est12/K halted hydrolysis of hexyl acetate and diacetoxyhexane. As a result of relieving catabolite repression and preventing the hydrolysis of ester, the optimal strain produced 3.7 mM hexyl acetate from hexane and 6.9 mM 6-hydroxy hexyl acetate and diacetoxyhexane from hexyl acetate, increased by 12.7- and 4.2-fold, respectively, as compared to the starting strain. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that the metabolic versatility of P. putida, and the associated carbon catabolite repression, can hinder production of diols and related esters. Growth on mcl-alcohol and diol esters could be prevented by deleting the dominant esterase. Carbon catabolite repression could be relieved by removing the Crc/Hfq attachment sites. This strategy can be used for efficient expression of other genes regulated by Crc/Hfq in Pseudomonas and related species to steer bioconversion processes.

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