Metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for the production of L-malate from xylose.

Metabolic engineering(2018)

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摘要
Malate is regarded as one of the key building block chemicals which can potentially be produced from biomass at a large scale. Although glucose has been extensively studied as the substrate for malate production, its high price and potential competition with food production are serious limiting factors. In this study, Escherichia coli was metabolically engineered to effectively produce malate from xylose, the second most abundant sugar component of lignocellulosic biomass. First, the biosynthetic route of malate was constructed by overexpressing D-tagatose 3-epimerase, L-fuculokinase, L-fuculose-phosphate aldolase, and aldehyde dehydrogenase A. Second, genes encoding malic enzyme, malate dehydrogenase, and fumarate hydratase were knocked out to eliminate malate consumption, resulting in a titer of 1.99 g/l malate and a yield of 0.47 g malate/g xylose. Third, glycolate oxidase and malate synthase were overexpressed to strengthen the conversion of glycolate to malate, which led to a titer of 4.33 g/l malate and a yield of 0.83 g malate/g xylose, reaching 93% of the theoretical yield. Finally, catalase HPII was overexpressed to decompose H2O2 and alleviate its toxicity, which improved cell growth and further boosted malate titer to 5.90 g/l with a yield of 0.80 g malate/g xylose. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to report efficient malate production from xylose as the carbon source.
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