Abstract

Cellulosic ethanol fermentability of ethanologenic strain Zymomonas mobilis is severely inhibited by phenolic aldehydes generated from lignocellulose pretreatment. Here, a 198 days’ laboratory adaptive evolution of Z. mobilis 8b in corn stover hydrolysate was conducted to increase its phenolic aldehydes tolerance and ethanol fermentability. The obtained Z. mobilis Z198 demonstrated a significantly improved conversion of the most toxic phenolic aldehyde (vanillin) by 6.3-fold and cellulosic ethanol production by 21.6%. The transcriptional analysis using qRT-PCR revealed that the gene ZMO3_RS07160 encoding SDR family oxidoreductase in Z. mobilis Z198 was significantly up-regulated by 11.7-fold. The overexpression of ZMO3_RS07160 in the parental Z. mobilis increased the ethanol fermentability to that of the adaptively evolved strain Z. mobilis Z198. This study provided a practical method to obtain a robust cellulosic ethanol fermenting strain, and a candidate gene for synthetic biology of biorefinery strains with strong phenolic aldehydes tolerance.

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