Abstract

In Escherichia coli, the transport and phosphorylation of glucose is mainly accomplished by the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent glucose-specific phosphotransferase system (PTSGlc), which is, therefore, frequently selected as a target for engineering to increase the intracellular level of phosphoenolpyruvate. Here we characterized the effects of a low glucose concentration on the growth, glucose consumption, and acetate secretion of individual strains with a single PTSGlc mutation. We found that most mutants accumulated similar amounts of biomass, consumed glucose at lower rates, and secreted less acetate compared with the wild-type parental strain. The exception was the growth-impaired strain MG1655I harboring a ptsI deletion. In summary, the fermentation performance of mutant strains under 5g/L glucose was obviously different with those strains under 20g/L glucose. This study is a good complement to the knowledge of PTSGlc in E. coli and indicates that engineering the components of PTSGlc should be carefully optimized, particularly during fermentation in the presence of low concentrations of glucose.

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