Abstract

BackgroundFunctional sugar alcohols have been widely used in the food, medicine, and pharmaceutical industries for their unique properties. Among these, erythritol is a zero calories sweetener produced by the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica. However, in wild-type strains, erythritol is produced with low productivity and yield and only under high osmotic pressure together with other undesired polyols, such as mannitol or d-arabitol. The yeast is also able to catabolize erythritol in non-stressing conditions.ResultsHerein, Y. lipolytica has been metabolically engineered to increase erythritol production titer, yield, and productivity from glucose. This consisted of the disruption of anabolic pathways for mannitol and d-arabitol together with the erythritol catabolic pathway. Genes ZWF1 and GND encoding, respectively, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase were also constitutively expressed in regenerating the NADPH2 consumed during erythritol synthesis. Finally, the gene RSP5 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae encoding ubiquitin ligase was overexpressed to improve cell thermoresistance. The resulting strain HCY118 is impaired in mannitol or d-arabitol production and erythritol consumption. It can grow well up to 35 °C and retain an efficient erythritol production capacity at 33 °C. The yield, production, and productivity reached 0.63 g/g, 190 g/L, and 1.97 g/L·h in 2-L flasks, and increased to 0.65 g/g, 196 g/L, and 2.51 g/L·h in 30-m3 fermentor, respectively, which has economical practical importance.ConclusionThe strategy developed herein yielded an engineered Y. lipolytica strain with enhanced thermoresistance and NADPH supply, resulting in a higher ability to produce erythritol, but not mannitol or d-arabitol from glucose. This is of interest for process development since it will reduce the cost of bioreactor cooling and erythritol purification.

Highlights

  • Functional sugar alcohols have been widely used in the food, medicine, and pharmaceutical industries for their unique properties

  • Construction of a chassis strain derived from Y. lipolytica CGMCC7326 We previously engineered the wild-type strain CGMCC7326 for erythritol production using hygromycin resistance for transformant selection [13]

  • The production titer, yield, productivity, and cell production rate for HCY118 was improved by 31%, 31.3%, 62.8%, 41.15%, respectively, as compared to that of strain CGMCC7326 at 33 °C

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Summary

Introduction

Functional sugar alcohols have been widely used in the food, medicine, and pharmaceutical industries for their unique properties. In wild-type strains, erythritol is produced with low productivity and yield and only under high osmotic pressure together with other undesired polyols, such as mannitol or d-arabitol. The engineered strain exhibited a 75% higher erythritol production titer as compared to that of wild type (80.6 g/L). In Y. lipolytica strain CGMCC7326, overexpression of two erythrose reductase genes (ER10, YALI0D07634g, and ER25, YALI0C13508g) and engineering of the NADPH cofactor metabolism by overexpression of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase genes (GND1, YALI0B15598g) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase genes (ZWF1, YALI0E22649g) led to a significant increase in erythritol titer and yield as compared to the wild-type strain (i.e., 190 g/L and 0.63 g/g, respectively) [13]. The improvement of the thermotolerance of the producing strain must be considered

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