Abstract
Polyketides represent a significant fraction of all natural products. Many possess pharmacological activity which makes them attractive drug candidates. The production of the parent macrocyclic aglycones is catalyzed by multi-modular polyketide synthases utilizing short-chain acyl-CoA monomers. When producing polyketides through heterologous hosts, one must not only functionally express the synthase itself, but activate the machinery used to generate the required substrate acyl-CoA's. As a result, metabolic engineering of these pathways is necessary for high-level production of heterologous polyketides. In this study, we over-express three different pathways for provision of the two substrates (propionyl-CoA and (2S)-methylmalonyl-CoA) utilized for the biosynthesis of 6-deoxyerythronolide B (6-dEB; the macrolactone precursor of erythromycin): (1) a propionate → propionyl-CoA → (2S)-methylmalonyl-CoA pathway, (2) a methylmalonate → methylmalonyl-CoA → propionyl-CoA pathway, and (3) a succinate → succinyl-CoA → (2R)-methylmalonyl-CoA → (2S)-methylmalonyl-CoA → propionyl-CoA pathway. The current study revealed that propionate is a necessary component for greater than 5 mg L(-1) titers. Deletion of the propionyl-CoA:succinate CoA transferase (ygfH) or over-expression of the transcriptional activator of short chain fatty acid uptake improved titer to over 100 mg L(-1), while the combination of the two improved titer to over 130 mg L(-1). The addition of exogenous methylmalonate could also improve titer to over 100 mg L(-1). Expression of a Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) methylmalonyl-CoA epimerase, in conjunction with over-expression of Escherichia coli's native methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, allowed for the incorporation of exogenously fed succinate into the 6-dEB core.
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