Abstract

Guanidino compounds can be synthesized by transamidination reactions using arginine as a guanidine group donor. The efficiency of guanidino biosynthesis is often affected by the supply of arginine and the inhibition of the coproduct ornithine. To alleviate this shortcoming, we designed a reconstituted ornithine cycle in Escherichia coli to engineer an efficient whole-cell catalyst for guanidinoacetate (GAA) production by introducing a heterogeneous arginine:glycine amidinotransferase (AGAT). To alleviate the inhibition of ornithine, a citrulline synthetic module was constructed and optimized by introducing a glutamine self-sufficient system. Then, to improve the pathway from citrulline to arginine, an aspartate self-sufficient system was introduced into the arginine synthetic module. By combining these modules (GAA, citrulline, and arginine synthetic modules), a reconstituted ornithine cycle was developed, which significantly improved the biocatalyst efficiency (3.9-fold increase). In the system, arginine was regenerated efficiently through the reconstituted ornithine cycle, which converted arginine from a substrate to a cofactor for the transamidination reaction, thereby relieving the ornithine inhibition. Moreover, the amidino group of GAA in this system was mainly supplied by carbon and nitrogen assimilation. After the engineering process, 8.61 g/L GAA (73.56 mM) with a productivity of 0.39 g/L/h was achieved in a 22 h bioconversion. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that GAA has been produced in E. coli. This reconstructed ornithine cycle could be used as a transamidination platform for amidino group supply and has potential applications in the biosynthesis of other guanidino compounds.

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