Blended nexus molecules promote CO 2 to l-tyrosine conversion.
Lei FanZihan ZhuSiyan ZhaoSmaranika PandaYilin ZhaoJingyi ChenLei ChenJunmei ChenJianzhong HeKang ZhouLei WangPublished in: Science advances (2024)
Using CO 2 as the primary feedstock offers the potential for high-value utilization of CO 2 while forging sustainable pathways for producing valuable natural products, such as l-tyrosine. Cascade catalysis is a promising approach but limited by stringent purity demands of nexus molecules. We developed an abiotic/biotic cascade catalysis using blended nexus molecules for l-tyrosine synthesis. Specifically, we begin by constructing a solid-state reactor to reduce CO 2 electrochemically, yielding a mixture of acetic acid and ethanol, which serves as the blended nexus molecules. Subsequently, we use genetic engineering to introduce an ethanol utilization pathway and a tyrosine producing pathway to Escherichia coli to facilitate l-tyrosine production. The ethanol pathway synergistically cooperated with the acetic acid pathway, boosting l-tyrosine production rate (nearly five times higher compared to the strain without ethanol utilization pathway) and enhancing carbon efficiency. Our findings demonstrate that using blended nexus molecules could potentially offer a more favorable strategy for the cascade catalysis aimed at producing valuable natural products.