Abstract

BackgroundYarrowia lipolytica is an unconventional yeast with a huge industrial potential. Despite many advantages for biotechnological applications, it possesses enormous demand for oxygen, which is a bottleneck in large scale production. In this study a codon optimized bacterial hemoglobin from Vitreoscilla stercoraria (VHb) was overexpressed in Y. lipolytica for efficient growth and erythritol synthesis from glycerol in low-oxygen conditions. Erythritol is a natural sweetener produced by Y. lipolytica under high osmotic pressure and at low pH, and this process requires high oxygen demand.ResultsUnder these conditions the VHb overexpressing strain showed mostly yeast-type cells resulting in 83% higher erythritol titer in shake-flask experiments. During a bioreactor study the engineered strain showed higher erythritol productivity (QERY = 0.38 g/l h) and yield (YERY = 0.37 g/g) in comparison to the control strain (QERY = 0.30 g/l h, YERY = 0.29 g/g). Moreover, low stirring during the fermentation process resulted in modest foam formation.ConclusionsThis study showed that overexpression of VHb in Y. lipolytica allows for dynamic growth and efficient production of a value-added product from a low-value substrate.

Highlights

  • Yarrowia lipolytica is an unconventional yeast with a huge industrial potential

  • Erythritol is produced from glucose by fermentation of the yeast Candida magnoliae or Moniliella sp., but it can be synthesized by the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica from glycerol [3, 4]

  • Overexpression of codon‐optimized VHb in Yarrowia lipolytica For robust growth and efficient production of the metabolites yeast Y. lipolytica requires a huge amount of dissolved oxygen in the medium

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Summary

Introduction

Yarrowia lipolytica is an unconventional yeast with a huge industrial potential. Despite many advan‐ tages for biotechnological applications, it possesses enormous demand for oxygen, which is a bottleneck in large scale production. Erythritol is a natural sweetener produced by Y. lipolytica under high osmotic pressure and at low pH, and this process requires high oxygen demand. Erythritol is a four-carbon polyol produced naturally by some microorganisms as an osmoprotectant. Due to its sweet taste, it is used as a natural sweetener This polyol occurs naturally in honey, wine and fermented food, is almost non-caloric, and due to its chemical structure it cannot change the level of the insulin in the blood, being safe for diabetics. Erythritol is produced from glucose by fermentation of the yeast Candida magnoliae or Moniliella sp., but it can be synthesized by the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica from glycerol [3, 4]

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