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Appl Environ Microbiol ; 88(17): e0097622, 2022 09 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35980178

ABSTRACT

As an important metabolic intermediate, 2-ketoisovalerate has significant potential in the pharmaceutical and biofuel industries. However, a low output through microbial fermentation inhibits its industrial application. The microbial production of 2-ketoisovalerate is representative whereby redox imbalance is generated with two molecules of NADH accumulated and an extra NADPH required to produce one 2-ketoisovalerate from glucose. To achieve efficient 2-ketoisovalerate production, metabolic engineering strategies were evaluated in Escherichia coli. After deleting the competing routes, overexpressing the key enzymes for 2-ketoisovalerate production, tuning the supply of NADPH, and recycling the excess NADH through enhancing aerobic respiration, a 2-ketoisovalerate titer and yield of 46.4 g/L and 0.644 mol/mol glucose, respectively, were achieved. To reduce the main by-product of isobutanol, the activity and expression of acetolactate synthase were modified. Additionally, a protein degradation tag was fused to pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) to curtail the conversion of pyruvate precursor into acetyl-CoA and the generation of NADH. The resulting strain, 050TY/pCTSDTQ487S-RBS55, was initially incubated under aerobic conditions to attain sufficient cell mass and then transferred to a microaerobic condition to degrade PDH and inhibit the remaining activity of PDH. Intracellular redox imbalance was relieved with titer, productivity and yield of 2-ketoisovalerate improved to 55.8 g/L, 2.14 g/L h and 0.852 mol/mol glucose. These results revealed metabolic engineering strategies for the production of a redox-imbalanced fermentative metabolite with high titer, productivity, and yield. IMPORTANCE An efficient microbial strain was constructed for 2-ketoisovalerate synthesis. The positive effect of the leuA deletion on 2-ketoisovalerate production was found. An optimal combination of overexpressing the target genes was obtained by adjusting the positions of the multiple enzymes on the plasmid frame and the presence of terminators, which could also be useful for the production of downstream products such as isobutanol and l-valine. Reducing the isobutanol by-product by engineering the acetolactate synthase called for special attention to decreasing the promiscuous activity of the enzymes involved. Redox-balancing strategies such as tuning the expression of the chromosomal pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase, recycling NADH under aerobic cultivation, switching off PDH by degradation, and inhibiting the expression and activity under microaerobic conditions were proven effective for improving 2-ketoisovalerate production. The degradation of PDH and inhibiting this enzyme's expression would serve as a means to generate a wide range of products from pyruvate.


Subject(s)
Acetolactate Synthase , Metabolic Engineering , Acetolactate Synthase/metabolism , Butanols , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Hemiterpenes , Keto Acids , Metabolic Engineering/methods , NAD/metabolism , NADP/metabolism , Pyruvates/metabolism
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