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Constructing a synthetic pathway for acetyl-coenzyme A from one-carbon through enzyme design.

Xiaoyun LuYuwan LiuYiqun YangShanshan WangQian WangXiya WangZhihui YanJian ChengCui LiuXue YangHao LuoSheng YangJunran GouLuzhen YeLina LuZhidan ZhangYu GuoYan NieJianping LinSheng LiChaoguang TianTao CaiBingzhao ZhuoHongwu MaWen WangYanhe MaYongjun LiuYin LiHuifeng Jiang
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Acetyl-CoA is a fundamental metabolite for all life on Earth, and is also a key starting point for the biosynthesis of a variety of industrial chemicals and natural products. Here we design and construct a Synthetic Acetyl-CoA (SACA) pathway by repurposing glycolaldehyde synthase and acetyl-phosphate synthase. First, we design and engineer glycolaldehyde synthase to improve catalytic activity more than 70-fold, to condense two molecules of formaldehyde into one glycolaldehyde. Second, we repurpose a phosphoketolase to convert glycolaldehyde into acetyl-phosphate. We demonstrated the feasibility of the SACA pathway in vitro, achieving a carbon yield ~50%, and confirmed the SACA pathway by 13C-labeled metabolites. Finally, the SACA pathway was verified by cell growth using glycolaldehyde, formaldehyde and methanol as supplemental carbon source. The SACA pathway is proved to be the shortest, ATP-independent, carbon-conserving and oxygen-insensitive pathway for acetyl-CoA biosynthesis, opening possibilities for producing acetyl-CoA-derived chemicals from one-carbon resources in the future.
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