Abstract

Thermo-acidic pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass is required to make it amenable to microbial metabolism and results in generation of furfural due to breakdown of pentose sugars. Furfural is toxic to microbial metabolism and results in reduced microbial productivity and increased production costs. This study asks if deletion of yghZ gene which encodes a NADPH-dependent aldehyde reductase enzyme results in improved furfural tolerance in Escherichia coli host. The ∆yghZ strain-SSK201-was tested for tolerance to furfural in presence of 5% xylose as a carbon source in AM1 minimal medium. At 96h and in presence of 1.0g/L furfural, the culture harboring strain SSK201 displayed 4.5-fold higher biomass, 2-fold lower furfural concentration and 15.75-fold higher specific growth rate (µ) as compared to the parent strain SSK42. The furfural tolerance advantage of SSK201 was retained when the carbon source was switched to glucose in AM1 medium and was lost in rich LB medium. The findings have potential to be scaled up to a hydrolysate culture medium, which contains furan inhibitors and lack nutritionally rich components, under bioreactor cultivation and observe growth advantage of the ∆yghZ host. It harbors potential to generate robust industrial strains which can convert lignocellulosic carbon into metabolites of interest in a cost-efficient manner.

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