Engineering Yeast Peroxisomes for α-Bisabolene Production from Sole Methanol with the Aid of Proteomic Analysis.
Linhui GaoRui HouPeng CaiLun YaoXiaoyan WuYunxia LiLihua ZhangYongjin J ZhouPublished in: JACS Au (2024)
Microbial metabolic engineering provides a feasible approach to sustainably produce advanced biofuels and biochemicals from renewable feedstocks. Methanol is an ideal feedstock since it can be massively produced from CO 2 through green energy, such as solar energy. However, engineering microbes to transform methanol and overproduce chemicals is challenging. Notably, the microbial production of isoprenoids from methanol is still rarely reported. Here, we extensively engineered Pichia pastoris (syn. Komagataella phaffii ) for the overproduction of sesquiterpene α-bisabolene from sole methanol by optimizing the mevalonate pathway and peroxisomal compartmentalization. Furthermore, through label-free quantification (LFQ) proteomic analysis of the engineered strains, we identified the key bottlenecks in the peroxisomal targeting pathway, and overexpressing the limiting enzyme EfmvaE significantly improved α-bisabolene production to 212 mg/L with the peroxisomal pathway. The engineered strain LH122 with the optimized peroxisomal pathway produced 1.1 g/L α-bisabolene under fed-batch fermentation in shake flasks, achieving a 69% increase over that of the cytosolic pathway. This study provides a viable approach for overproducing isoprenoid from sole methanol in engineered yeast cell factories and shows that proteomic analysis can help optimize the organelle compartmentalized pathways to enhance chemical production.