Abstract

2'-Fucosyllactose (2'-FL) is the most abundant oligosaccharide in human milk and one of the most actively studied human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs). When 2'-FL is produced through biological production using a microorganism, like Escherichia coli, d-lactose is often externally fed as an acceptor substrate for fucosyltransferase (FT). When d-glucose is used as a carbon source for the cell growth and d-lactose is transported by lactose permease (LacY) in lac operon, d-lactose transport is under the control of catabolite repression (CR), limiting the supply of d-lactose for FT reaction in the cell, hence decreasing the production of 2'-FL. In this study, a remarkable increase of 2'-FL production was achieved by relieving the CR from the lac operon of the host E. coliBL21 and introducing adequate site-specific mutations into α-1,2-FT (FutC) for enhancement of catalytic activity and solubility. For the host engineering, the native lac promoter (Plac ) was substituted for tac promoter (Ptac ), so that the lac operon could be turned on, but not subjected to CR by high d-glucose concentration. Next, for protein engineering of FutC, family multiple sequence analysis for conserved amino acid sequences and protein-ligand substrate docking analysis led us to find several mutation sites, which could increase the solubility of FutC and its activity. As a result, a combination of four mutation sites (F40S/Q150H/C151R/Q239S) was identified as the best candidate, and the quadruple mutant of FutC enhanced 2'-FL titer by 2.4-fold. When the above-mentioned E. coli mutant host transformed with the quadruple mutant of futC was subjected to fed-batch culture, 40 g l-1 of 2'-FL titer was achieved with the productivity of 0.55 g l-1 h-1 and the specific 2'-FL yield of 1.0 g g-1 dry cell weight.

Full Text
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