Abstract

BackgroundButyric acid, an essential C4 platform chemical, is widely used in food, pharmaceutical, and animal feed industries. Clostridium tyrobutyricum is the most promising microorganism for industrial bio-butyrate production. However, the metabolic driving mechanism for butyrate synthesis was still not profoundly studied.ResultsThis study reports a first-generation genome-scale model (GEM) for C. tyrobutyricum, which provides a comprehensive and systematic analysis for the butyrate synthesis driving mechanisms. Based on the analysis in silico, an energy conversion system, which couples the proton efflux with butyryl-CoA transformation by two redox loops of ferredoxin, could be the main driving force for butyrate synthesis. For verifying the driving mechanism, a hydrogenase (HydA) expression was perturbed by inducible regulation and knockout. The results showed that HydA deficiency significantly improved the intracellular NADH/NAD+ rate, decreased acetate accumulation (63.6% in serum bottle and 58.1% in bioreactor), and improved the yield of butyrate (26.3% in serum bottle and 34.5% in bioreactor). It was in line with the expectation based on the energy conversion coupling driving mechanism.ConclusionsThis work show that the first-generation GEM and coupling metabolic analysis effectively promoted in-depth understanding of the metabolic driving mechanism in C. tyrobutyricum and provided a new insight for tuning metabolic flux direction in Clostridium chassis cells.

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