Biosynthesis of phenylpyruvic acid from l-phenylalanine using chromosomally engineered Escherichia coli.
Tianzhen XiongYajun BaiTai-Ping FanXiaohui ZhengYujie CaiPublished in: Biotechnology and applied biochemistry (2021)
The efficiency of whole-cell biotransformation is often affected by the genetic instability of plasmid-based expression systems, which require selective pressure to maintain the stability of the plasmids. To circumvent this shortcoming, we constructed a chromosome engineering strain for the synthesis of phenylpyruvic acid (PPA) from l-phenylalanine. First, l-amino acid deaminase (pmLAAD) from Proteus myxofaciens was incorporated into Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) chromosome and the copy numbers of pmLAAD were increased by chemically induced chromosomal evolution (CIChE). Fifty-nine copies of pmLAAD were obtained in E. coli BL8. The PPA titer of E. coli BL8 reached 2.22 g/L at 6 h. Furthermore, the deletion of lacI improved PPA production. In the absence of isopropyl-β-d-thiogalactopyranoside, the resulting strain, E. coli BL8△recA△lacI, produced 2.65 g/L PPA at 6 h and yielded a 19.37% increase in PPA production compared to E. coli BL8△recA. Finally, the engineered E. coli BL8△recA△lacI strain achieved 19.14 g/L PPA at 24 h in a 5-L bioreactor.