Abstract

Lycopene attracts increasing interests in the pharmaceutical, food, and cosmetic industries due to its anti-oxidative and anti-cancer properties. Compared with other lycopene production methods, such as chemical synthesis or direct extraction from plants, the biosynthesis approach using microbes is more economical and sustainable. In this work, we engineered Haloferax mediterranei, a halophilic archaeon, as a new lycopene producer. H. mediterranei has the de novo synthetic pathway for lycopene but cannot accumulate this compound. To address this issue, we reinforced the lycopene synthesis pathway, blocked its flux to other carotenoids and disrupted its competitive pathways. The reaction from geranylgeranyl-PP to phytoene catalyzed by phytoene synthase (CrtB) was identified as the rate-limiting step in H. mediterranei. Insertion of a strong promoter PphaR immediately upstream of the crtB gene, or overexpression of the heterologous CrtB and phytoene desaturase (CrtI) led to a higher yield of lycopene. In addition, blocking bacterioruberin biosynthesis increased the purity and yield of lycopene. Knock-out of the key genes, responsible for poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV) biosynthesis, diverted more carbon flux into lycopene synthesis, and thus further enhanced lycopene production. The metabolic engineered H. mediterranei strain produced lycopene at 119.25 ± 0.55 mg per gram of dry cell weight in shake flask fermentation. The obtained yield was superior compared to the lycopene production observed in most of the engineered Escherichia coli or yeast even when they were cultivated in pilot scale bioreactors. Collectively, this work offers insights into the mechanism involved in carotenoid biosynthesis in haloarchaea and demonstrates the potential of using haloarchaea for the production of lycopene or other carotenoids.

Highlights

  • Lycopene is a C40 isoprenoid compound in the carotenoid family

  • Identifying the Rate-Limiting Steps Involved in Native Lycopene Biosynthesis

  • These results indicated that the step from GGPP to phytoene was the rate-limiting step in lycopene synthesis in H. mediterranei

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Summary

Introduction

Lycopene is a C40 isoprenoid compound in the carotenoid family. Due to its anti-oxidative and anti-cancer activities (Sies and Stahl, 1998; Gajowik and Dobrzynska, 2014), lycopene has been widely used for nutritional supplements, pharmaceutical and cosmetic products (Wei et al, 2017). The conventional methods for lycopene production include direct extraction from plants, Engineering Lycopene Biosynthesis in H. mediterranei chemical synthesis and microbial fermentation. Many haloarchaeal species are capable of producing the compounds of the carotenoid family (Rodrigo-Banos et al, 2015), such as phytoene, β-carotene, lycopene, as well as the derivatives of bacterioruberin and salinixanthin (de Lourdes Moreno et al, 2012). They hold several advantages for carotenoid production: the high-salt tolerance enables haloarchaea cultivation under non-sterile condition and reduces the energy cost (Singh and Singh, 2017). Haloarchaea are considered as an alternative producer for carotenoids (Naziri et al, 2014)

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