Abstract
A recombinant strain of Pseudomonas putida GPp104 (pHP1014::E146), which expressed the polyhydroxyalkanoic acid (PHA) synthase of Thiocapsa pfennigii exhibiting an unusual substrate specificity at a high level was incubated in two-stage batch or fed-batch accumulation experiments with 5-hydroxyhexanoic acid (5HHx) as carbon source in the second cultivation phase, copolyesters of 3-hydroxybutyric acid (3HB) plus 5HHx, or of 3HB, 3-hydroxyhexanoic acid (3HHx) plus 5HHx were accumulated as revealed by gas-chromatographic and 13C-NMR spectroscopic analysis. When the recombinant P. putida GPp104 was incubated with 4-hydroxyheptanoic acid (4HHp) as carbon source in the second cultivation phase, a copolyester consisting of 3HB, 3-hydroxyvaleric acid and 3- and 4-hydroxyheptanoic acid accumulated. Providing 4-hydroxyoctanoic acid as carbon source in the second cultivation phase led to the accumulation of a polyester that contained 1–2 mol% 4-hydroxyoctanoic acid besides 3-hydroxyoctanoic acid, 3HHx, 3-hydroxyvaleric acid and 3HB. In addition to PHA containing these new constituents, PHA with 4-hydroxyvaleric acid was accumulated from laevulinic acid. Eleven strains from five genera have been also analysed for their ability to utilize different carbon sources for colony growth, which might serve as potential precursors for the biosynthesis of PHA with unusual constituents. Although most of the carbon sources were utilized by some strains for colony growth, accumulation experiments gave no evidence for the accumulation of new PHA by these wild-type strains.
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