Abstract

NADH-dependent reductase enzyme catalyzes the phenolic aldehyde conversion and correspondingly improves the ethanol fermentability of the ethanologenic Zymomonas mobilis. This study constructed the transcriptional landscape of mono/dioxygenase genes in Z. mobilis ZM4 under the stress of the toxic phenolic aldehyde inhibitors of 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde, syringaldehyde, and vanillin. One specific dioxygenase encoding gene ZMO1721 was differentially expressed by 3.07-folds under the stress of 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde among the eleven mono/dioxygenase genes. The purified ZMO1721 shared 99.9% confidence and 48.0% identity with the oxidoreductase in Rhodoferax ferrireducens T118 was assayed and the NADH-dependent reduction activity was confirmed for phenolic aldehyde vanillin conversion. The ZMO1721 gene was then overexpressed in Z. mobilis ZM4 and the 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde conversion rate was accelerated. The cell growth, glucose consumption, and ethanol productivity of Z. mobilis ZM4 were also improved by ZMO1721 overexpression. The genes identified on improving phenolic aldehyde tolerance and ethanol fermentability in this study could be used as the synthetic biology tools for modification of ethanologenic strains.

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