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Methanol-Dependent Carbon Fixation for Irreversible Synthesis of d-Allulose from d-Xylose by Engineered Escherichia coli .

Qiang GuoMei-Ming LiuShang-He ZhengLing-Jie ZhengQian MaYing-Kai ChengSu-Ying ZhaoLi-Hai FanHui-Dong Zheng
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2022)
d-Allulose is a rare hexose with great application potential, owing to its moderate sweetness, low energy, and unique physiological functions. The current strategies for d-allulose production, whether industrialized or under development, utilize six-carbon sugars such as d-glucose or d-fructose as a substrate and are usually based on the principle of reversible Izumoring epimerization. In this work, we designed a novel route that coupled the pathways of methanol reduction, pentose phosphate (PP), ribulose monophosphate (RuMP), and allulose monophosphate (AuMP) for Escherichia coli to irreversibly synthesize d-allulose from d-xylose and methanol. After improving the expression of AlsE by SUMO fusion and regulating the carbon fluxes by knockout of FrmRAB, RpiA, PfkA, and PfkB, the titer of d-allulose in fed-batch fermentation reached ≈70.7 mM, with a yield of ≈0.471 mM/mM on d-xylose or ≈0.512 mM/mM on methanol.
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