Abstract

Terpenoids are used in various industries, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a promising microorganism for terpenoid production. Introducing the mevalonate (MVA) pathway into the mitochondria of a strain with an augmented inherent cytosolic MVA pathway increased terpenoid production but also led to the accumulation of toxic pyrophosphate intermediates that negatively affected terpenoid production. We first engineered the inherent MVA pathway in the cytosol and then introduced the MVA pathway into the mitochondria using several promoter combinations, considering the toxicity of pyrophosphate intermediates. However, the highest titer, 183mg/L, tends to be only 5% higher than that of the strain that only augmented the inherent MVA pathway (SYCM1; 174mg/L). Next, we hypothesized that, in addition to the toxicity of pyrophosphate, other compounds in the MVA pathway could affect the squalene titer. Thus, we constructed a combinatorial strain library expressing MVA pathway enzymes in the mitochondria with various promoter combinations. The highest squalene titer (230mg/L) was 32% higher than that of SYCM1. The promoter set revealed that mitigation of mono- and pyrophosphate compound accumulation was important for mitochondrial usage. This study demonstrated that a combinatorial strain library is useful for discovering the optimal gene expression balance in engineering yeast.

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