Abstract

BackgroundErythritol is a four-carbon sugar alcohol with sweetening properties that is used by the agro-food industry as a food additive. In the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica, the last step of erythritol synthesis involves the reduction of erythrose by specific erythrose reductase(s). In the earlier report, an erythrose reductase gene (YALI0F18590g) from erythritol-producing yeast Y. lipolytica MK1 was identified (Janek et al. in Microb Cell Fact 16:118, 2017). However, deletion of the gene in Y. lipolytica MK1 only resulted in some lower erythritol production but the erythritol synthesis process was still maintained, indicating that other erythrose reductase gene(s) might exist in the genome of Y. lipolytica.ResultsIn this study, we have isolated genes g141.t1 (YALI0D07634g) and g3023.t1 (YALI0C13508g) encoding two novel erythrose reductases (ER). The biochemical characterization of the purified enzymes showed that they have a strong affinity for erythrose. Deletion of the two ER genes plus g801.t1 (YALI0F18590g) did not prevent erythritol synthesis, suggesting that other ER or ER-like enzymes remain to be discovered in this yeast. Overexpression of the newly isolated two genes (ER10 or ER25) led to an average 14.7% higher erythritol yield and 31.2% higher productivity compared to the wild-type strain. Finally, engineering NADPH cofactor metabolism by overexpression of genes ZWF1 and GND1 encoding glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, respectively, allowed a 23.5% higher erythritol yield and 50% higher productivity compared to the wild-type strain. The best of our constructed strains produced an erythritol titer of 190 g/L in baffled flasks using glucose as main carbon source.ConclusionsOur results highlight that in the Y. lipolytica genome several genes encode enzymes able to reduce erythrose into erythritol. The catalytic properties of these enzymes and their cofactor dependency are different from that of already known erythrose reductase of Y. lipolytica. Constitutive expression of the newly isolated genes and engineering of NADPH cofactor metabolism led to an increase in erythritol titer. Development of fermentation strategies will allow further improvement of this productivity in the future.

Highlights

  • Erythritol is a four-carbon sugar alcohol with sweetening properties that is used by the agro-food industry as a food additive

  • Identification of erythrose reductase‐encoding genes in Y. lipolytica CGMCC7326 In erythritol producing yeast, the final step of erythritol synthesis consists in the reduction of erythrose by specific erythrose reductase [10, 11]

  • Janek et al [15] identified an ylER enzyme (YALI0F18590p) in Y. lipolytica based on sequence similarity with erythrose reductase from Candida magnoliae [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Erythritol is a four-carbon sugar alcohol with sweetening properties that is used by the agro-food industry as a food additive. Erythritol (1,2,3,4-butanetetrol) is a four-carbon sugar alcohol with sweetening properties and applications in the agro-food and pharmaceutical industries [1,2,3]. It is most commonly produced by yeast, namely Torula corallina [4, 5], Candida magnoliae [6, 7], Pseudozyma tsukubaensis [8], and Trichosporonoides megachiliensis [9] with YP/S conversion yield ranging from 0.43 to 0.61 g/g. Other engineering strategies based on improved carbon source metabolism [10, 16] or cofactor engineering [11] have been employed with success to improve erythritol production

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