Abstract

Cost-effective production of cellulosic ethanol requires robust microorganisms for rapid co-fermentation of glucose and xylose. This study aims to develop a recombinant diploid xylose-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain for efficient conversion of lignocellulosic biomass sugars to ethanol. Episomal plasmids harboring codon-optimized Piromyces sp. E2 xylose isomerase (PirXylA) and Orpinomyces sp. ukk1 xylose (OrpXylA) genes were constructed and transformed into S. cerevisiae. The strain harboring plasmids with tandem PirXylA was favorable for xylose utilization when xylose was used as the sole carbon source, while the strain harboring plasmids with tandem OrpXylA was beneficial for glucose and xylose cofermentation. PirXylA and OrpXylA genes were also individually integrated into the genome of yeast strains in multiple copies. Such integration was beneficial for xylose alcoholic fermentation. The respiration-deficient strain carrying episomal or integrated OrpXylA genes exhibited the best performance for glucose and xylose co-fermentation. This was partly attributed to the high expression levels and activities of xylose isomerase. Mating a respiration-efficient strain carrying the integrated PirXylA gene with a respiration-deficient strain harboring integrated OrpXylA generated a diploid recombinant xylose-fermenting yeast strain STXQ with enhanced cell growth and xylose fermentation. Co-fermentation of 162 g L−1 glucose and 95 g L−1 xylose generated 120.6 g L−1 ethanol in 23 h, with sugar conversion higher than 99%, ethanol yield of 0.47 g g−1, and ethanol productivity of 5.26 g L−1·h−1.

Highlights

  • Ethanol can be produced from renewable resources such as crops or agricultural waste

  • xylose isomerase (XI) activities were assayed for 39a2 recombinant strains with episomal XI genes (Table 2)

  • Quantitative Reserve Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) showed that the transcription level of XI gene in the engineered strains significantly increased compared to that in the parent strain 39a2 (Table 3)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ethanol can be produced from renewable resources such as crops or agricultural waste. It is a sustainable and clean fuel. Further growth in bioethanol production largely depends on the effective conversion of lignocellulosic feedstock such as agricultural and forestry wastes to bioethanol because they are the most abundant polymers of fermentable sugars [1,2,3]. Much research has been done to genetically engineer S. cerevisiae strains for xylose fermentation [6,7,8,9,10]. Two xylose-assimilating pathways were heterologously engineered in S. cerevisiae for xylose-fermenting yeast construction. One focused on the D-xylose isomerase (XI) pathway [11,12], the other focused on the D-xylose reductase (XR) and xylitol dehydrogenase (XDH) pathway [10,13,14,15]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
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