Polyketides represent an extremely diverse class of secondary metabolites often explored for their bioactive traits. These molecules are also attractive building blocks for chemical catalysis and polymerization. However, the use of polyketides in larger scale chemistry applications is stymied by limited titers and yields from both microbial and chemical production. Here, we demonstrate that an oleaginous organism (specifically, ) can overcome such production limitations owing to a natural propensity for high flux through acetyl-CoA. By exploring three distinct metabolic engineering strategies for acetyl-CoA precursor formation, we demonstrate that a previously uncharacterized pyruvate bypass pathway supports increased production of the polyketide triacetic acid lactone (TAL). Ultimately, we establish a strain capable of producing over 35% of the theoretical conversion yield to TAL in an unoptimized tube culture. This strain also obtained an averaged maximum titer of 35.9 ± 3.9 g/L with an achieved maximum specific productivity of 0.21 ± 0.03 g/L/h in bioreactor fermentation. Additionally, we illustrate that a β-oxidation-related overexpression () can support high TAL production and is capable of achieving over 43% of the theoretical conversion yield under nitrogen starvation in a test tube. Next, through use of this bioproduct, we demonstrate the utility of polyketides like TAL to modify commodity materials such as poly(epichlorohydrin), resulting in an increased molecular weight and shift in glass transition temperature. Collectively, these findings establish an engineering strategy enabling unprecedented production from a type III polyketide synthase as well as establish a route through O-functionalization for converting polyketides into new materials.
The nonconventional, oleaginous yeast, Yarrowia lipolytica is rapidly emerging as a valuable host for the production of a variety of both lipid and nonlipid chemical products. While the unique genetics of this organism pose some challenges, many new metabolic engineering tools have emerged to facilitate improved genetic manipulation in this host. This review establishes a case for Y. lipolytica as a premier metabolic engineering host based on innate metabolic capacity, emerging synthetic tools, and engineering examples. The metabolism underlying the lipid accumulation phenotype of this yeast as well as high flux through acyl-CoA precursors and the TCA cycle provide a favorable metabolic environment for expression of relevant heterologous pathways. These properties allow Y. lipolytica to be successfully engineered for the production of both native and nonnative lipid, organic acid, sugar and acetyl-CoA derived products. Finally, this host has unique metabolic pathways enabling growth on a wide range of carbon sources, including waste products. The expansion of carbon sources, together with the improvement of tools as highlighted here, have allowed this nonconventional organism to act as a cellular factory for valuable chemicals and fuels.
Sorting large libraries of cells for improved small molecule secretion is throughput limited. Here, we combine producer/secretor cell libraries with whole-cell biosensors using a microfluidic-based screening workflow. This approach enables a mix-and-match capability using off-the-shelf biosensors through either coencapsulation or pico-injection. We demonstrate the cell type and library agnostic nature of this workflow by utilizing single-guide RNA, transposon, and ethyl-methyl sulfonate mutagenesis libraries across three distinct microbes (Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Yarrowia lipolytica), biosensors from two organisms (E. coli and S. cerevisiae), and three products (triacetic acid lactone, naringenin, and L-DOPA) to identify targets improving production/secretion.
In contrast to far-UV (< 290 nm) DNA damage, a large fraction of the DNA damage caused by near-UV is oxygen-dependent, suggesting the involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The oxidized base 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (GO) is characteristic of ROS-induced DNA damage and is removed by Fapy (formamidopyrimidine) glycosylase. We have recently shown that Escherichia coli strains deficient in Fapy glycosylase (fpg) are hypersensitive to the lethal effects of UVA but not far-UV (UVC), suggesting lesions recognized by this enzyme may be important premutagenic or lethal lesions generated by near-UV radiation. In this study, we have found that while the far-UV-induced mutation rates of Fapy-deficient and wild-type strains were similar, near-UV (UVA and UVB) was hypermutagenic to a Fapy-deficient strain, causing a dose-dependent increase in induced mutation relative to wild type (up to five-fold at 200 kJ/m2). Using a plasmid back mutation assay, the predominant near-UV-induced mutations in both wild-type and Fapy-deficient strains were found to be C-->T transitions and G -->T transversions. The former is probably due to replicative bypass of pyrimidine dimers or (6-4) photoproducts that are known to be generated by near-UV, whereas the latter may be due to mispairing of GO lesions with adenine during replication. Consistent with this, the frequency of near-UV-induced G-->T transversions was 16-fold higher in a Fapy-deficient strain than a wild-type strain.
Enzymes are represented across a vast space of protein sequences and structural forms and have activities that far exceed the best chemical catalysts; however, engineering them to have novel or enhanced activity is limited by technologies for sensing product formation. Here, we describe a general and scalable approach for characterizing enzyme activity that uses the metabolism of the host cell as a biosensor by which to infer product formation. Since different products consume different molecules in their synthesis, they perturb host metabolism in unique ways that can be measured by mass spectrometry. This provides a general way by which to sense product formation, to discover unexpected products and map the effects of mutagenesis.
Polyketides are a unique class of molecules with attractive bioactive and chemical properties. As a result, biorenewable production is being explored with these molecules as potential pharmaceutical, fuel, and material precursors. In particular, type III polyketide synthases enable access to a diverse class of chemicals using a relatively simple biochemical synthesis pathway. In this review, the recent advances in the engineering of microbial hosts for the production of type III PKS‐derived polyketides are highlighted. In particular, the field has moved beyond simple proof‐of‐concept and has been exploring engineering efforts that have led to improved production scales. This review details engineering progress for the production of acetyl‐CoA‐ and malonyl‐CoA‐derived polyketides including the products triacetic acid lactone and phloroglucinol as well as polyphenolic, phenylpropanoid‐derived compounds including flavonoids, stilbenoids, and curcuminoids. Specifically, the authors focus on enumerating the metabolic engineering strategies employed and product titers achieved for these molecules. Finally, the authors highlight tools and strategies that can be leveraged to realize the potential of microbial production and diversification of these molecules.
In contrast to the damage caused by far-UV, the damage caused by UVA (320-400 nm) is largely oxygen dependent, suggesting near-UV-mediated DNA damage involves reactive oxygen species. The DNA repair enzymes that recognize oxidized bases may, therefore, be an important part of the cell's near-UV defense repertoire. To evaluate the relative importance of Fpg (Fapy) glycosylase (an enzyme known to remove oxidized bases) and the DNA damage-inducible UvrABC excinuclease in recovery from near-UV-induced stress, we have constructed fpg- and uvrA- derivatives of Escherichia coli and tested the response (survival) of these strains to both UVA and far-UV radiation. Relative to control strains, the fpg- derivatives were found to be consistently more sensitive to the lethal effects of UVA, but not far-UV radiation. In contrast, uvrA- mutants were more sensitive than control strains to both UVA and far-UV radiation. Thymine dimers, known to be produced by far-UV and corrected by UvrABC, were not generated by the UVA fluences used in this study, suggesting that some other UVA-induced lesion(s) is recognized and repaired by this excinuclease.
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