Dual-Regulation in Peroxisome and Cytoplasm toward Efficient Limonene Biosynthesis with Rhodotorula toruloides .
Qidou GaoYaqi DongYing HuangSasa LiuXiaochun ZhengYiming MaQingsheng QiXue WangZongbao Kent ZhaoXiaobing YangPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2024)
Rhodotorula toruloides is a potential workhorse for production of various value-added chemicals including terpenoids, oleo-chemicals, and enzymes from low-cost feedstocks. However, the limited genetic toolbox is hindering its metabolic engineering. In the present study, four type I and one novel type II peroxisomal targeting signal (PTS1/PTS2) were characterized and employed for limonene production for the first time in R. toruloides . The implant of the biosynthesis pathway into the peroxisome led to 111.5 mg/L limonene in a shake flask culture. The limonene titer was further boosted to 1.05 g/L upon dual-metabolic regulation in the cytoplasm and peroxisome, which included employing the acetoacetyl-CoA synthase NphT7, adding an additional copy of native ATP-dependent citrate lyase, etc. The final yield was 0.053 g/g glucose, which was the highest ever reported. The newly characterized PTSs should contribute to the expansion of genetic toolboxes for R. toruloides . The results demonstrated that R. toruloides could be explored for efficient production of terpenoids.