Abstract

Genkwanin has various significant roles in nutrition, biomedicine, and pharmaceutical biology. Previously, this compound has been chiefly produced by plant-originated extraction or chemical synthesis. However, due to increasing concern and demand for safe food and environmental issues, the biotechnological production of genkwanin and other bioactive compounds based on safe, cheap, and renewable substrates has gained much interest. This paper described recombinant Escherichia coli-based co-culture engineering that was reconstructed for the de novo production of genkwanin from D-glucose. The artificial genkwanin biosynthetic chain was divided into two modules in which the upstream strain contained the genes for synthesizing p-coumaric acid from D-glucose. And, the downstream module contained a gene cluster that produced the precursor apigenin and the final product, genkwanin. The Box-Behnken design, a response surface methodology, was used to empirically model the production of genkwanin and optimize its productivity. As a result, the application of the designed co-culture improved the genkwanin production by 48.8±1.3mg/L or 1.7-fold compared to the mono-culture. In addition, the scale-up of genkwanin bioproduction by bioreactor resulted in 68.5±1.9mg/L at a 48h time point. The combination of metabolic engineering and fermentation technology was therefore a very efficient and applicable approach to enhance the production of other bioactive compounds.

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