Abstract

BackgroundFatty acid-based substances play an important role in many products, from food supplements to pharmaceutical products and biofuels. The production of fatty acids, mainly in their esterified form as triacylglycerol (TAG), has been intensively studied in oleaginous yeasts, whereas much less effort has been invested into non-oleaginous species. In the present work, we engineered the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which is commonly regarded as non-oleaginous, for the storage of high amounts of TAG, comparable to the contents achieved in oleaginous yeasts.ResultsWe investigated the effects of several mutations with regard to increased TAG accumulation and identified six of them as important for this phenotype: a point mutation in the acetyl-CoA carboxylase Acc1p, overexpression of the diacylglycerol acyltransferase Dga1p, deletions of genes coding for enzymes involved in the competing pathways glycogen and steryl ester synthesis and TAG hydrolysis, and a deletion of CKB1, the gene coding for one of the regulatory subunits of casein kinase 2. With the combination of these mutations in a S. cerevisiae strain with a relatively high neutral lipid level already in the non-engineered state, we achieved a TAG content of 65% in the dry biomass. High TAG levels were not only obtained under conditions that favor lipid accumulation, but also in defined standard carbon-limited media.ConclusionsBaker's yeast, which is usually regarded as inefficient in the storage of TAG, can be converted into a highly oleaginous strain that could be useful in processes aiming at the synthesis of fatty acid-based products. This work emphasizes the importance of strain selection in combination with metabolic engineering to obtain high product levels.

Highlights

  • Fatty acid-based substances play an important role in many products, from food supplements to phar‐ maceutical products and biofuels

  • We investigated the effects of a combination of a starting strain with already high TAG content with genetic engineering strategies, with the aim to maximize TAG production and storage in S. cerevisiae

  • The TAG content in S. cerevisiae strains covers a broad range In this study, we aimed at the engineering of a S. cerevisiae strain with high TAG content

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Summary

Introduction

Fatty acid-based substances play an important role in many products, from food supplements to phar‐ maceutical products and biofuels. The production of fatty acids, mainly in their esterified form as triacylglycerol (TAG), has been intensively studied in oleaginous yeasts, whereas much less effort has been invested into non-oleaginous species. The best-characterized of these yeasts is Yarrowia lipolytica and many metabolic engineering strategies to further increase the TAG content of this species have been tested, resulting in TAG contents of up to 80%, but mostly between 60 and 70% of the cell dry weight. All these engineered strains bear one or several mutations in the neutral lipid (NL) synthesis pathway. Progress has been made in the engineering of other non-conventional yeasts, the lack of fast and efficient methods for the genetic engineering of these yeasts hampers more rapid advancement

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