Multiple strategies for metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for efficient production of glycolate.
Tong ZhuDie YaoDi LiHongtao XuShiru JiaZaiqiang WuJun CaiXinna ZhuXueli ZhangPublished in: Biotechnology and bioengineering (2021)
Glycolate is a bulk chemical with wide applications in the textile, food processing, and pharmaceutical industries. Glycolate can be produced from glucose via the glycolysis and glyoxylate shunt pathways, followed by reduction to glycolate. However, two problems limit the productivity and yield of glycolate when using glucose as the sole carbon source. The first is a cofactor imbalance in the production of glycolate from glucose via the glycolysis pathway, since NADPH is required for glycolate production, while glycolysis generates NADH. To rectify this imbalance, the NADP+ -dependent glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase GapC from Clostridium acetobutylicum was introduced to generate NADPH instead of NADH in the oxidation of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate during glycolysis. The soluble transhydrogenase SthA was further eliminated to conserve NADPH by blocking its conversion into NADH. The second problem is an unfavorable carbon flux distribution between the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the glyoxylate shunt. To solve this problem, isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH) was eliminated to increase the carbon flux of glyoxylate and thereby improve the glycolate titer. After engineering through the integration of gapC, combined with the inactivation of ICDH, SthA, and by-product pathways, as well as the upregulation of the two key enzymes isocitrate lyase (encoding by aceA), and glyoxylate reductase (encoding by ycdW), the glycolate titer increased to 5.3 g/L with a yield of 1.89 mol/mol glucose. Moreover, an optimized fed-batch fermentation reached a titer of 41 g/L with a yield of 1.87 mol/mol glucose after 60 h.