In-Depth Two-Stage Transcriptional Reprogramming and Evolutionary Engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for Efficient Bioethanol Production from Xylose with Acetate.
Cheng ZhangQian XueJunyan HouAli MohsinMei ZhangMeijin GuoYixuan ZhuJie BaoJingyu WangWei XiaoLimin CaoPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2019)
In order to achieve rapid xylose utilization in the presence of acetate, improved yeast strains were engineered for higher bioethanol production. First, a six-gene cluster, including XYL1/XYL2/XKS1/TAL1/PYK1/MGT05196, was generated by using an in-depth two-stage (glucose and xylose) transcription reprogramming strategy in an evolutionary adapted strain of CE7, resulting in two improved engineered strains WXY46 and WXY53. Through a combined screening of xylose and glucose stage-specific promoters between tricarboxylic acid (TCA)/HSP and constitutive types, respectively, WXY46 with the constitutive promoters showed a much higher ethanol yield than that of WXY53 with the TCA/HSP promoters. Second, an optimized strain WXY74 was obtained by using more copies of a six-gene cluster, which resulted in a higher ethanol yield of 0.500 g/g total sugars with acetate conditions. At last, simultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation were performed by using the evolved WXY74 strain, which produced 58.4 g/L of ethanol from wheat straw waste and outperformed previous haploid XR-XDH strains.
Keyphrases
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- genome wide
- escherichia coli
- heat shock
- heat shock protein
- copy number
- heat stress
- optical coherence tomography
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- blood glucose
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- sewage sludge
- type diabetes
- blood pressure
- risk assessment
- weight loss
- embryonic stem cells