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Modular Coculture to Reduce Substrate Competition and Off-Target Intermediates in Androstenedione Biosynthesis.

Ruosi ZhangMing-Dong YaoHaidi MaWen-Hai XiaoYing WangYing-Jin Yuan
Published in: ACS synthetic biology (2023)
Substrate competition within a metabolic network constitutes a common challenge in microbial biosynthesis system engineering, especially if indispensable enzymes can produce multiple intermediates from a single substrate. Androstenedione (4AD) is a central intermediate in the production of a series of steroidal pharmaceuticals; however, its yield via the coexpression of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase ( 3 β -HSD ) and 17α-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase ( CYP17A1 ) in a microbial chassis affords a nonlinear pathway in which these enzymes compete for substrates and produce structurally similar unwanted intermediates, thereby reducing 4AD yields. To avoid substrate competition, we split the competing 3 β -HSD and CYP17A1 pathway components into two separate Yarrowia lipolytica strains to linearize the pathway. This spatial segregation increased substrate availability for 3 β -HSD in the upstream strain, consequently decreasing the accumulation of the unwanted intermediate 17-hydroxypregnenolone (17OHP5) from 94.8 ± 4.4% in single-chassis monocultures to 24.8 ± 12.6% in cocultures of strains expressing 3 β -HSD and CYP17A1 separately. Orthologue screening to increase CYP17A1 catalytic efficiency and the preferential production of desired intermediates increased the biotransformation capacity in the downstream pathway, further decreasing 17OHP5 accumulation to 3.9%. Furthermore, nitrogen limitation induced early 4AD accumulation (final titer, 7.71 mg/L). This study provides a framework for reducing intrapathway competition between essential enzymes during natural product biosynthesis as well as a proof-of-concept platform for linear steroid production.
Keyphrases
  • escherichia coli
  • microbial community
  • amino acid
  • cell wall
  • high throughput
  • high glucose
  • drug induced