Abstract

Poly-γ-glutamic acid (γ-PGA) is an anionic polymer with wide-ranging applications in the areas of medicine, light chemical industry, wastewater treatment, and agriculture. However, the production cost of γ-PGA is high for the requirement of adding the expensive precursor L-glutamic acid during fermentation, which hinders its widespread application. In this study, in order to improve γ-PGA yield, central carbon metabolism was engineered to enhance the carbon flux of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and glutamic acid synthesis in a γ-PGA production strain Bacillus licheniformis WX-02. Firstly, pyruvate dehydrogenase (PdhABCD) and citrate synthase (CitA) were overexpressed to strengthen the flux of pyruvate into TCA cycle, resulting in 34.93% and 11.14% increase of γ-PGA yield in B. licheniformis WX-02, respectively. Secondly, the carbon flux to glyoxylate shunt was rewired via varying the expression of isocitrate lyase (AceA), and a 23.24% increase of γ-PGA yield was obtained in AceA down-regulated strain WXPbacAaceBA. Thirdly, deletion of pyruvate formate-lyase gene pflB led to a 30.70% increase of γ-PGA yield. Finally, combinatorial metabolic engineering was applied, and γ-PGA titer was enhanced to 12.02g/L via overexpressing pdhABCD and citA, repressing aceA, and deleting pflB, with a 69.30% improvement compared to WX-02. Collectively, metabolic engineering of central carbon metabolism is an effective strategy for enhanced γ-PGA production in B. licheniformis, and this research provided a promising strain for industrial production of γ-PGA.

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