Abstract

BackgroundL(-)-carnitine production has been widely studied because of its beneficial properties on various diseases and dysfunctions. Enterobacteria possess a specific biotransformation pathway which can be used for the enantioselective production of L(-)-carnitine. Although bioprocesses catalyzed by enzymes or whole cells can overcome the lack of enantioselectivity of chemical methods, current processes for L(−)-carnitine production still have severe disadvantages, such as the low yields, side reactions and the need of high catalyst concentrations and anaerobic conditions for proper expression of the biotransformation pathway. Additionally, genetically engineered strains so far constructed for L(-)-carnitine production are based on plasmids and, therefore, suffer from segregational unstability.ResultsIn this work, a stable, high yielding strain for L(-)-carnitine production from low cost substrates was constructed. A metabolic engineering strategy was implemented in a multiple mutant for use in both growing and resting cells systems. The effect of mutations on gene expression and metabolism was analyzed to characterize the productivity constraints of the wild type and the overproducer strains. Precise deletion of genes which encode proteins of central and carnitine metabolisms were performed. Specifically, flux through the TCA cycle was increased by deletion of aceK (which encodes a bifunctional kinase/phosphatase which inhibits isocitrate dehydrogenase activity) and the synthesis of the by-product γ-butyrobetaine was prevented by deletion of caiA (which encodes a crotonobetainyl-CoA reductase). Both mutations led to improve the L(-)-carnitine production by 20 and 42%, respectively. Moreover, the highly regulated promoter of the cai operon was substituted by a constitutive artificial promoter increasing the biotransformation rate, even under aerobic conditions. Resting cells of the BW ΔaceK ΔcaiA p37cai strain produced 59.6 mmol l-1 · h-1 of L(−)-carnitine, doubling the productivity of the wild type strain. In addition, almost total conversion was attained in less than two hours without concomitant production of the side product γ–butyrobetaine.ConclusionsL(-)-carnitine production has been enhanced by strain engineering. Metabolic engineering strategies herein implemented allowed obtaining a robust and high yielding E. coli strain. The new overproducer strain attained almost complete conversion of crotonobetaine into L(-)-carnitine with growing and resting cells, and even under aerobic conditions, overcoming the main environmental restriction to carnitine metabolism expression. So far, this is the best performing L(-)-carnitine production E. coli strain described.

Highlights

  • L(-)-carnitine production has been widely studied because of its beneficial properties on various diseases and dysfunctions

  • Chemical synthesis yields a racemic mixture of D,L-carnitine, which cannot be administered to patients [1,2,3,4]

  • Several biological processes have been developed for the production of L(-)-carnitine from non-chiral precursors [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] especially using strains belonging to the genera Escherichia and Proteus

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Summary

Introduction

L(-)-carnitine production has been widely studied because of its beneficial properties on various diseases and dysfunctions. This enantioselective biotransformation has the potential to enhance the overall economic and environmental viability of the chemical synthesis process In this respect, the L(-)-carnitine metabolism in E. coli has been widely studied and characterized [5,6,14,15,16] because of its role in anaerobic respiration, and stress survival, especially in osmoprotection [17,18,19]. Crotonobetaine can be reduced to γ-butyrobetaine by means of a crotonobetainylCoA reductase (CaiA) [16,24], a respiration process which is inhibited by electron acceptors such as oxygen or fumarate (Figure 1B) All these activities are encoded by two divergent operons: caiTABCDE, which encodes the carnitine biotransformation enzymes [25], and fixABCX, which encodes putative flavoproteins involved in anaerobic carnitine respiration [26,27]. Carnitine production by E. coli is carried out in anaerobic conditions to induce the expression of the cai operon, as described in the current model of regulation [5,6,15]

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