Abstract

Recombinant Escherichia coli is a desirable platform for the production of many biological compounds including poly(3-hydroxyalkanoates), a class of naturally occurring biodegradable polyesters with promising biomedical and material applications. Although the controlled production of desirable polymers is possible with the utilization of fatty acid feedstocks, a central challenge to this biosynthetic route is the improvement of the relatively low polymer yield, a necessary factor of decreasing the production costs. In this study we sought to address this challenge by deleting arcA and ompR, two global regulators with the capacity to inhibit the uptake and activation of exogenous fatty acids. We found that polymer yields in a ΔarcA mutant increased significantly with respect to the parental strain. In the parental strain, PHV yields were very low but improved 64-fold in the ΔarcA mutant (1.92–124 mg L−1) The ΔarcA mutant also allowed for modest increases in some medium chain length polymer yields, while weight average molecular weights improved by approximately 1.5-fold to 12-fold depending on the fatty acid substrate utilized. These results were supported by an analysis of differential gene expression, which showed that the key genes (fadD, fadL, and fadE) encoding fatty acid degradation enzymes were all upregulated by 2-, 10-, and 31-fold in an ΔarcA mutant, respectively. Additionally, the short chain length fatty acid uptake genes atoA, atoE and atoD were upregulated by 103-, 119-, and 303-fold respectively, though these values are somewhat inflated due to low expression in the parental strain. Overall, this study demonstrates that arcA is an important target to improve PHA production from fatty acids.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13568-016-0291-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Poly(3-hydroxyalkanoates), or PHAs, are a group of biodegradable polyesters produced by a variety of microorganisms as a form of carbon storage (Lu et al 2009)

  • The mutant strains RSC02, RSC04, and RSC06 were derived from E. coli LSBJ by the deletion of arcA, ompR, and a tandem arcA/ompR deletion, respectively

  • Analysis by GC showed significant increases in the amount of polymer produced by E. coli RSC02 when compared to E. coli LSBJ for most fatty acid substrates, for those with six or fewer carbons (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Poly(3-hydroxyalkanoates), or PHAs, are a group of biodegradable polyesters produced by a variety of microorganisms as a form of carbon storage (Lu et al 2009). This system allowed for strict control of repeating unit composition which enables great control over the physical properties of PHA polymers produced using this system, unlocking the potential for tailoring PHA materials for click-chemistry modifications (Levine et al 2015, 2016; Pinto et al 2016). These previous studies addressed control of the monomer composition and physical and chemical properties of PHA polymers, overall polymer yields were still relatively low and some fatty acid substrates had poor incorporation into either PHA homo- or copolymers. In this study E. coli LSBJ was engineered to improve the biosynthesis of PHA from fatty acid substrates by removing the global regulatory genes arcA and ompR

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