Abstract

l-Lactic acid (LA) is a three-carbon hydroxycarboxylic acid with extensive applications in food, cosmetic, agricultural, pharmaceutical, and bioplastic industries. However, microbial LA production is limited by its intrinsic inefficiency of cellular metabolism. Here, pathway engineering was used to rewire the biosynthetic pathway for LA production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by screening heterologous l-lactate dehydrogenase, reducing ethanol accumulation, and introducing a bacterial acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) synthesis pathway. To improve its intrinsic efficiency of LA export, transporter engineering was conducted by screening the monocarboxylate transporters and then strengthening the capacity of LA export, leading to LA production up to 51.4 g/L. To further enhance its intrinsic efficiency of acid tolerance, adaptive evolution was adopted by cultivating yeast cells with a gradual increase in LA levels during 12 serial subcultures, resulting in a 17.5% increase in LA production to 60.4 g/L. Finally, the engineered strain S.c-NO.2-100 was able to produce 121.5 g/L LA, with a yield of up to 0.81 g/g in a 5-L batch bioreactor. The strategy described here provides a guide for developing efficient cell factories for the production of the other industrially useful organic acids. IMPORTANCE Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the most widely engineered cell factories for the production of organic acids. However, microbial production of l-lactic acid is limited by its intrinsic inefficiency of cellular metabolism in S. cerevisiae. Here, the transmission efficiency of the biosynthetic pathway was improved by pathway optimization to increase l-lactic acid production. Then, the synthetic ability for l-lactic acid was further enhanced by adaptive evolution to improve acid tolerance of S. cerevisiae. Based on these strategies, the final engineered S. cerevisiae strain achieved high efficiency of l-lactic acid production. These findings provide new insight into improving the intrinsic efficiency of cellular metabolism and will help to construct superior industrial yeast strains for high-level production of other organic acids.

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