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Enhancement of Sulfur Conversion Rate in the Production of l-Cysteine by Engineered Escherichia coli.

Han LiuYehua HouYu WangZhi-Min Li
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2019)
Cysteine is a commercially important sulfur-containing amino acid widely used as a supplement in the agricultural and food industries. It is extremely desirable to achieve a high sulfur conversion rate in the fermentation-based cysteine production. Here, the metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli was performed to enhance the sulfur conversion rate in cysteine biosynthesis. Accordingly, the reduction of sulfur loss by the regulator decR and its yhaOM operons were deleted. serACB was integrated into chromosome with constitutive promoter to coordinately increase sulfur utilization. The sulfur assimilation pathways and sulfur transcriptional regulator cysB were overexpressed to regulate sulfur metabolism and enhance sulfur conversion significantly. After the process optimization in fed-batch fermentation, LH16 [SLH02 ΔyhaM Ptrc1-serACB-cysM-nrdH-(pLH03, pTrc99a-cysB)] produced 7.5 g/L of cysteine with a sulfur conversion rate of 90.11%. These results indicate that cysteine production by LH16 is a valuable process in the agricultural and food industries.
Keyphrases
  • escherichia coli
  • fluorescent probe
  • living cells
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals
  • gene expression
  • amino acid
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • single molecule
  • multidrug resistant
  • biofilm formation