Abstract

7-Dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) is widely present in various organisms and is an important precursor of vitamin D3. Despite significant improvements in the biosynthesis of 7-DHC, it remains insufficient to meet the industrial demands. In this study, we reported high-level production of 7-DHC in an industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae leveraging subcellular organelles. Initially, the copy numbers of DHCR24 were increased in combination with sterol transcriptional factor engineering and rebalanced the redox power of the strain. Subsequently, the effects of compartmentalizing the post-squalene pathway in peroxisomes were validated by assembling various pathway modules in this organelle. Furthermore, several peroxisomes engineering was conducted to enhance the production of 7-DHC. Utilizing the peroxisome as a vessel for partial post-squalene pathways, the potential of yeast for 7-dehydrocholesterol production was demonstrated by achieving a 26-fold increase over the initial production level. 7-DHC titer reached 640.77 mg/L in shake flasks and 4.28 g/L in a 10 L bench-top fermentor, the highest titer ever reported. The present work lays solid foundation for large-scale and cost-effective production of 7-DHC for practical applications.

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