Abstract

Isopropanol has a good potential as a new fuel substitution. In the model biosynthesis pathway of isopropanol synthesis, acetoacetyl-CoA is converted to acetoacetate by acetoacetyl-CoA transferases, which requires an acetate molecule as a substrate. Herein, a novel isopropanol synthesis pathway based on mammalian ketone metabolic pathway was developed. In this pathway, acetoacetyl-CoA is condensed with acetyl-CoA to generate 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) by HMG-CoA synthase, and then catalyzed by HMG-CoA lyase to generate acetoacetate. This process is acetate-independent. Under the same experimental system using glycerol as carbon source, the E. coli strain MG::ISOP1 containing the novel pathway produced 11.7 times more isopropanol than the strain MG::ISOP0 containing the model pathway. The pta-ackA knockout mutant strain MG∆pta-ackA::ISOP1, which reduced the conversion of acetyl-CoA to acetate, further increased the production from 76 mg/L to 360 mg/L. In another strategy, knocking out atoDA to block the acetoacetate degradation pathway in strain MG∆atoDA::ISOP1 increased the production to 680 mg/L. By knocking out both of pta-ackA and atoDA, strain MGΔpta-ackAΔatoDA::ISOP1 produced 964 mg/L of isopropanol, which was 12.7 times that of MG::ISOP1. This study indicated that the novel pathway is competent for isopropanol synthesis, and provides a new perspective for biosynthesis of isopropanol.

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