Abstract

Research studies on NAD+ have proven its crucial role in aging and disease. Nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN), as the key intermediate of NAD+, plays a significant role in supplying and maintaining NAD+ levels. In the present study, a biocatalytic method for the efficient synthesis of NMN was established. First, Escherichia coli was systematically modified to make it more conducive to the biosynthesis and accumulation of NMN. Next, the performance of nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase from Vibrio bacteriophage KVP40 (VpNadV) was determined, which has the best catalytic activity to produce NMN from nicotinamide. The accumulation of extracellular NMN was further increased after the introduction of an NMN transporter. Fine-tuning of gene expression and copy number led to the synthesis of NMN at the yield of 2.6 g/L at the shake flask level. The introduction of a nicotinamide transporter, BcniaP, could not obviously increase the production of NMN at the shake flask level, but it decreased the production of NMN at the bioreactor level. Finally, the titer of NMN reached 16.2 g/L with a conversion ratio of 97.0% from nicotinamide, both of which are highest according to currently available reports. The fed-batch fermentation with direct supplementation of nicotinamide could facilitate the industrial-scale production of NMN compared to that achieved by the whole-cell catalysis process. These results also represent the highest reported yield of NMN synthesized from nicotinamide in E. coli.

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