Abstract

BackgroundThe shortage of food based feedstocks has been one of the stumbling blocks in industrial biomanufacturing. The acetone bioproduction from the traditional acetone–butanol–ethanol fermentation is limited by the non-specificity of products and competitive utilization of food-based substrates. Using genetically modified Escherichia coli to produce acetone as sole product from the cost-effective non-food based substrates showed great potential to overcome these problems.ResultsA novel acetone biosynthetic pathway were constructed based on genes from Clostridium acetobutylicum (thlA encoding for thiolase, adc encoding for acetoacetate decarboxylase, ctfAB encoding for coenzyme A transferase) and Escherichia coli MG1655 (atoB encoding acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase, atoDA encoding for acetyl-CoA: acetoacetyl-CoA transferase subunit α and β). Among these constructs, one recombinant MG1655 derivative containing the hybrid pathway consisting of thlA, atoDA, and adc, produced the highest level of acetone from acetate. Reducing the gluconeogenesis pathway had little effect on acetone production, while blocking the TCA cycle by knocking out the icdA gene enhanced the yield of acetone significantly. As a result, acetone concentration increased up to 113.18 mM in 24 h by the resting cell culture coupling with gas-stripping methods.ConclusionsAn engineered E. coli strain with optimized hybrid acetone biosynthetic pathway can utilize acetate as substrate efficiently to synthesize acetone without other non-gas byproducts. It provides a potential method for industrial biomanufacturing of acetone by engineered E. coli strains from non-food based substrate.

Highlights

  • The shortage of food based feedstocks has been one of the stumbling blocks in industrial biomanufacturing

  • Acetate is first converted into acetyl-CoA through acetyl-CoA synthetase (ACS) pathway or acetate kinase and phosphotransacetylase (ACK-PTA) pathway

  • Taken from native acetone producing C. acetobutylicum, genes thl, adc and ctfAB were first cloned into pTrc99a to generate pTrcTAC. pTrcTAC was introduced into E. coli MG1655 for acetone production

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The shortage of food based feedstocks has been one of the stumbling blocks in industrial biomanufacturing. In the traditional ABE fermentation, the solvent-producing strains (such as Clostridium strains) usually use the food-based feedstocks (grain, maize, molasses and so on) as the substrates. A non-oxidative glycolysis pathway was introduced into E. coli by genome expression phosphoketolase from Bifidobacterium adolescentis which improved the theoretical acetone yield from 1 to 1.5 mol acetone/mol glucose and obtained 47 mM acetone from glucose in shake-flasks [6]. These works improved the titer and theoretical yield of acetone production from glucose by engineered E. coli

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call