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Query: EC:6.2.1.1 (
ACS
)
78,556
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To further enhance the pyruvate productivity by multi-vitamin auxotrophic yeast Torulopsis glabrata, a breeding strategy aiming at decreasing the activity of
pyruvate decarboxylase
but increasing the activity of
acetyl-CoA synthetase
was developed based on analysis of pyruvate-related metabolic pathways. Nitrosoguanidine mutagenized cells of T. glabrata WSH-IP303 were screened for mutants that require acetate for complete growth on glucose minimum medium. A mutant, T. glabrata CCTCC M202019, produced pyruvate 21% higher than that of the parent strain and was genetically stable in flask cultures, was selected as a working strain. To elucidate the metabolic changes that led to the increase of pyruvate production, the activities of enzymes that involved in pyruvate-related metabolic pathways of the mutant and the parent strain were determined. Enzymatic analysis revealed that, compared with the parent strain WSH-IP303, the activity of
pyruvate decarboxylase
of the mutant strain CCTCC M202019 decreased by roughly 40%, while the activity of
acetyl-CoA synthetase
of the latter increased by 103.5% or 57.4%, respectively, in the presence or absence of acetate. When 6 g/L sodium acetate was added to the medium, pyruvate production by the mutant strain CCTCC M202019 reached 68.7 g/L at 62 h (yield on glucose, 0.651 g/g) in fermentations performed in a 7-L jar fermentor, indicating the shortage of cytosolic acetyl-CoA resulted from the disruption of
pyruvate decarboxylase
was properly compensated by the increase of the activity of
acetyl-CoA synthetase
.
...
PMID:[Application of a metabolic-pathway-analysis based breeding strategy enhances the production of pyruvate by Torulopsis glabrata]. 1584 68
In bakers' yeast, an immediate alcoholic fermentation begins when a glucose pulse is added to glucose-limited, aerobically grown cells. The mechanism of this short-term Crabtree effect was investigated via a comparative enzymic analysis of eight yeast species. It was established that the fermentation rate of the organisms upon transition from glucose limitation to glucose excess is positively correlated with the level of
pyruvate decarboxylase
(
EC 4.1.1.1
). In the Crabtree-negative yeasts, the
pyruvate decarboxylase
activity was low and did not increase when excess glucose was added. In contrast, in the Crabtree-positive yeasts, the activity of this enzyme was on the average sixfold higher and increased after exposure to glucose excess. In Crabtree-negative species, relatively high activities of acetaldehyde dehydrogenases (EC 1.2.1.4 and EC 1.2.1.5) and
acetyl coenzyme A synthetase
(
EC 6.2.1.1
), in addition to low
pyruvate decarboxylase
activities, were present. Thus, in these yeasts, acetaldehyde can be effectively oxidized via a bypass that circumvents the reduction of acetaldehyde to ethanol. Growth rates of most Crabtree-positive yeasts did not increase upon transition from glucose limitation to glucose excess. In contrast, the Crabtree-negative yeasts exhibited enhanced rates of biomass production which in most cases could be ascribed to the intracellular accumulation of reserve carbohydrates. Generally, the glucose consumption rate after a glucose pulse was higher in the Crabtree-positive yeasts than in the Crabtree-negative yeasts. However, the respiratory capacities of steady-state cultures of Crabtree-positive yeasts were not significantly different from those of Crabtree-negative yeasts. Thus, a limited respiratory capacity is not the primary cause of the Crabtree effect in yeasts. Instead, the difference between Crabtree-positive and Crabtree-negative yeasts is attributed to differences in the kinetics of glucose uptake, synthesis of reserve carbohydrates, and pyruvate metabolism.
...
PMID:Transient-state analysis of metabolic fluxes in crabtree-positive and crabtree-negative yeasts. 1634 1
The control of metabolic flow is a prerequisite for efficient chemical production in transgenic microorganisms. Exogenous genes required for the biosynthesis of target chemicals are expressed under strong promoters, while the endogenous genes of the original metabolic pathway are repressed by disruption or mutation. These genetic manipulations occasionally cause harmful effects to the host. In the lactate-producing yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where endogenous
pyruvate decarboxylase
(
PDC
) is disrupted and exogenous lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is introduced,
PDC
deletion is extremely detrimental to cell growth but is required for efficient production of lactate. A suitable means to dynamically control the metabolic flow from ethanol fermentation during the growth phase to lactate fermentation during the production phase is needed. Here, we demonstrated that this flow can be controlled by the exclusive expression of
PDC
and LDH with a Cre-lox genetic switch. This switch was evaluated with a gene cassette that encoded two different fluorescence proteins and enabled changes in genotype and phenotype within 2 and 10 h, respectively. Transgenic yeast harboring this switch and the
PDC
-LDH cassette showed a specific growth rate (0.45 h (-1)) that was almost the same as that of wild-type (0.47 h (-1)). Upon induction of the genetic switch, the transgenic yeast produced lactate from up to 85.4% of the glucose substrate, while 91.7% of glucose went to ethanol before induction. We thus propose a "metabolic shift" concept that can serve as an alternative means to obtain gene products that are currently difficult to obtain by using conventional methodologies.
ACS
Synth Biol 2012 May 18
PMID:A modified Cre-lox genetic switch to dynamically control metabolic flow in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 2365 Nov 55
Targeting of proteins to bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) is mediated by an 18-amino-acid peptide sequence. Herein, we report the solution structure of the N-terminal targeting peptide (P18) of PduP, the aldehyde dehydrogenase associated with the 1,2-propanediol utilization metabolosome from Citrobacter freundii. The solution structure reveals the peptide to have a well-defined helical conformation along its whole length. Saturation transfer difference and transferred NOE NMR has highlighted the observed interaction surface on the peptide with its main interacting shell protein, PduK. By tagging both a
pyruvate decarboxylase
and an alcohol dehydrogenase with targeting peptides, it has been possible to direct these enzymes to empty BMCs in vivo and to generate an ethanol bioreactor. Not only are the purified, redesigned BMCs able to transform pyruvate into ethanol efficiently, but the strains containing the modified BMCs produce elevated levels of alcohol.
ACS
Synth Biol 2014 Jul 18
PMID:Solution structure of a bacterial microcompartment targeting peptide and its application in the construction of an ethanol bioreactor. 2493 91
Ethanol is an important biofuel. Heterologous expression of Zymomonas mobilis
pyruvate decarboxylase
(Pdc) and alcohol dehydrogenase (AdhB) increases ethanol production in Escherichia coli. A fusion of PDC and ADH was generated and expressed in E. coli. The fusion enzyme was demonstrated to possess both activities. AdhB activity was significantly lower when fused to PDC than when the two enzymes were expressed separately. However, cells expressing the fusion protein generated ethanol more rapidly and to higher levels than cells coexpressing Pdc and AdhB, suggesting a specific rate enhancement due to the fusion of the two enzymes.
ACS
Synth Biol 2014 Dec 19
PMID:Fusion of pyruvate decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase increases ethanol production in Escherichia coli. 2552 3
The optimization of synthetic pathways is a central challenge in metabolic engineering. OptSSeq (Optimization by Selection and Sequencing) is one approach to this challenge. OptSSeq couples selection of optimal enzyme expression levels linked to cell growth rate with high-throughput sequencing to track enrichment of gene expression elements (promoters and ribosome-binding sites) from a combinatorial library. OptSSeq yields information on both optimal and suboptimal enzyme levels, and helps identify constraints that limit maximal product formation. Here we report a proof-of-concept implementation of OptSSeq using homoethanologenesis, a two-step pathway consisting of
pyruvate decarboxylase
(Pdc) and alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh) that converts pyruvate to ethanol and is naturally optimized in the bacterium Zymomonas mobilis. We used OptSSeq to determine optimal gene expression elements and enzyme levels for Z. mobilis Pdc, AdhA, and AdhB expressed in Escherichia coli. By varying both expression signals and gene order, we identified an optimal solution using only Pdc and AdhB. We resolved current uncertainty about the functions of the Fe
2+
-dependent AdhB and Zn
2+
-dependent AdhA by showing that AdhB is preferred over AdhA for rapid growth in both E. coli and Z. mobilis. Finally, by comparing predictions of growth-linked metabolic flux to enzyme synthesis costs, we established that optimal E. coli homoethanologenesis was achieved by our best pdc-adhB expression cassette and that the remaining constraints lie in the E. coli metabolic network or inefficient Pdc or AdhB function in E. coli. OptSSeq is a general tool for synthetic biology to tune enzyme levels in any pathway whose optimal function can be linked to cell growth or survival.
ACS
Synth Biol 2016 12 16
PMID:OptSSeq: High-Throughput Sequencing Readout of Growth Enrichment Defines Optimal Gene Expression Elements for Homoethanologenesis. 2740 24
Global climate change caused by the emission of anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs) is a grand challenge to humanity. To alleviate the trend, the consumption of fossil fuels needs to be largely reduced and alternative energy technologies capable of controlling GHG emissions are anticipated. In this study, we introduced a synthetic reductive pentose phosphate pathway (rPPP) into a xylose-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain SR8 to achieve simultaneous lignocellulosic bioethanol production and carbon dioxide recycling. Specifically, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum and phosphoribulokinase from Spinacia oleracea were introduced into the SR8 strain. The resulting strain with the synthetic rPPP was able to exhibit a higher yield of ethanol and lower yields of byproducts (xylitol and glycerol) than a control strain. In addition, the reduced release of carbon dioxide by the engineered strain was observed during xylose fermentation, suggesting that the carbon dioxide generated by
pyruvate decarboxylase
was partially reassimilated through the synthetic rPPP. These results demonstrated that recycling of carbon dioxide from the ethanol fermentation pathway in yeast can be achieved during lignocellulosic bioethanol production through a synthetic carbon conservative metabolic pathway. This strategy has a great potential to alleviate GHG emissions during the production of second-generation ethanol.
ACS
Synth Biol 2017 02 17
PMID:Recycling Carbon Dioxide during Xylose Fermentation by Engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 2774 92
Biodiesel production using microalgae would play a pivotal role in satisfying future global energy demands. Understanding of lipid metabolism in microalgae is important to isolate oleaginous strain capable of overproducing lipids. It has been reported that reducing starch biosynthesis can enhance lipid accumulation. However, the metabolic mechanism controlling carbon partitioning from starch to lipids in microalgae remains unclear, thus complicating the genetic engineering of algal strains. We here used "dynamic" metabolic profiling and essential transcription analysis of the oleaginous green alga Chlamydomonas sp. JSC4 for the first time to demonstrate the switching mechanisms from starch to lipid synthesis using salinity as a regulator, and identified the metabolic rate-limiting step for enhancing lipid accumulation (e.g., pyruvate-to-acetyl-CoA). These results, showing salinity-induced starch-to-lipid biosynthesis, will help increase our understanding of dynamic carbon partitioning in oleaginous microalgae. Moreover, we successfully determined the changes of several key lipid-synthesis-related genes (e.g., acetyl-CoA carboxylase,
pyruvate decarboxylase
, acetaldehyde dehydrogenase,
acetyl-CoA synthetase
and pyruvate ferredoxin oxidoreductase) and starch-degradation related genes (e.g., starch phosphorylases), which could provide a breakthrough in the marine microalgal production of biodiesel.
...
PMID:Dynamic metabolic profiling together with transcription analysis reveals salinity-induced starch-to-lipid biosynthesis in alga Chlamydomonas sp. JSC4. 2837 98
When aiming to produce a target chemical at high yield, titer, and productivity, various combinations of genetic parts available to build the target pathway can generate a large number of strains for characterization. This engineering approach will become increasingly laborious and expensive when seeking to develop desirable strains for optimal production of a large space of biochemicals due to extensive screening. Our recent theoretical development of modular cell (MODCELL) design principles can offer a promising solution for rapid generation of optimal strains by coupling a modular cell with exchangeable production modules in a plug-and-play fashion. In this study, we experimentally validated some design properties of MODCELL by demonstrating the following: (i) a modular (chassis) cell is required to couple with a production module, a heterologous ethanol pathway, as a testbed, (ii) degree of coupling between the modular cell and production modules can be modulated to enhance growth and product synthesis, (iii) a modular cell can be used as a host to select an optimal
pyruvate decarboxylase
(
PDC
) of the ethanol production module and to help identify a hypothetical PDC protein, and (iv) adaptive laboratory evolution based on growth selection of the modular cell can enhance growth and product synthesis rates. We envision that the MODCELL design provides a powerful prototype for modular cell engineering to rapidly create optimal strains for synthesis of a large space of biochemicals.
ACS
Synth Biol 2018 01 19
PMID:A Prototype for Modular Cell Engineering. 2901 19
Mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is important in the production of lipids in oleaginous yeast, but other yeast may bypass the mitochondria (PDH bypass), converting pyruvate in the cytosol to acetaldehyde, then acetate and acetyl CoA which is further converted to lipids. Using a metabolic model based on the oleaginous yeast
Yarrowia lipolytica
, we found that introduction of this bypass to an oleaginous yeast should result in enhanced yield of triacylglycerol (TAG) on substrate.
Trichosporon oleaginosus
(formerly
Cryptococcus curvatus
) is an oleaginous yeast which can produce TAGs from both glucose and xylose. Based on the sequenced genome, it lacks at least one of the enzymes needed to complete the PDH bypass, acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ALD), and may also be deficient in
pyruvate decarboxylase
and
acetyl-CoA synthetase
under production conditions. We introduced these genes to
T. oleaginosus
in various combinations and demonstrated that the yield of TAG on both glucose and xylose was improved, particularly at high C/N ratio. Expression of a phospholipid:diacyltransferase encoding gene in conjunction with the PDH bypass further enhanced lipid production. The yield of TAG on xylose (0.27 g/g) in the engineered strain approached the theoretical maximum yield of 0.289 g/g. Interestingly, TAG production was also enhanced compared to the control in some strains which were given only part of the bypass pathway, suggesting that these genes may contribute to alternative routes to cytoplasmic acetyl CoA. The metabolic model indicated that the improved yield of TAG on substrate in the PDH bypass was dependent on the production of NADPH by ALD. NADPH for lipid synthesis is otherwise primarily supplied by the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). This would contribute to the greater improvement of TAG production from xylose compared to that observed from glucose when the PDH bypass was introduced, since xylose enters metabolism through the non-oxidative part of the PPP. Yield of TAG from xylose in the engineered strains (0.21-0.27 g/g) was comparable to that obtained from glucose and the highest so far reported for lipid or TAG production from xylose.
...
PMID:Enhanced Triacylglycerol Production With Genetically Modified
Trichosporon oleaginosus
. 2997 32
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