Abstract

Backgroundα-Ionone is highly valued in cosmetics and perfumery with a global usage of 100–1000 tons per year. Metabolic engineering by microbial fermentation offers a promising way to produce natural (R)-α-ionone in a cost-effective manner. Apart from optimizing the metabolic pathways, the approach is also highly dependent on generating a robust strain which retains productivity during the scale-up process. To our knowledge, no study has investigated strain robustness while increasing α-ionone yield.ResultsBuilt on our previous work, here, we further increased α-ionone yield to 11.4 mg/L/OD in 1 mL tubes by overexpressing the bottleneck dioxygenase CCD1 and re-engineering the pathway, which is > 65% enhancement as compared to our previously best strain. However, the yield decreased greatly to 2.4 mg/L/OD when tested in 10 mL flasks. Further investigation uncovered an unexpected inhibition that excessive overexpression of CCD1 was accompanied with increased hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production. Excessive H2O2 broke down lycopene, the precursor to α-ionone, leading to the decrease in α-ionone production in flasks. This proved that expressing too much CCD1 can lead to reduced production of α-ionone, despite CCD1 being the rate-limiting enzyme. Overexpressing the alkyl hydroperoxide reductase (ahpC/F) partially solved this issue and improved α-ionone yield to 5.0 mg/L/OD in flasks by reducing oxidative stress from H2O2. The strain exhibited improved robustness and produced ~ 700 mg/L in 5L bioreactors, the highest titer reported in the literature.ConclusionOur study provides an insight on the importance of mediating the oxidative stress to improve strain robustness and microbial production of α-ionone during scaling up. This new strategy may be inspiring to the biosynthesis of other high-value apocarotenoids such as retinol and crocin, in which oxygenases are also involved.

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