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Cofactor Metabolic Engineering of Escherichia coli for Aerobic L-Malate Production with Lower CO 2 Emissions.

Zhiming JiangYouming JiangHao WuWenming ZhangFengxue XinJiangfeng MaMin Jiang
Published in: Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Escherichia coli has been engineered for L-malate production via aerobic cultivation. However, the maximum yield obtained through this mode is inferior to that of anaerobic fermentation due to massive amounts of CO 2 emissions. Here, we aim to address this issue by reducing CO 2 emissions of recombinant E. coli during aerobic L-malate production. Our findings indicated that NADH oxidation and ATP-synthesis-related genes were down-regulated with 2 g/L of YE during aerobic cultivations of E. coli E23, as compared to 5 g/L of YE. Then, E23 was engineered via the knockout of nuoA and the introduction of the nonoxidative glycolysis (NOG) pathway, resulting in a reduction of NAD + and ATP supplies. The results demonstrate that E23 (Δ nuoA , NOG) exhibited decreased CO 2 emissions, and it produced 21.3 g/L of L-malate from glucose aerobically with the improved yield of 0.43 g/g. This study suggests that a restricted NAD + and ATP supply can prompt E. coli to engage in incomplete oxidization of glucose, leading to the accumulation of metabolites instead of utilizing them in cellular respiration.
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