Fermentative production of 1-propanol, which is one of the promising precursors of polypropylene production, from d-glucose, l-rhamnose and glycerol using metabolically engineered Escherichia coli was examined. To confer the ability to produce 1-propanol from 1,2-propanediol (1,2-PD) in recombinant E. coli, a part of the pdu regulon including the diol dehydratase and the propanol dehydrogenase genes together with the adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) regeneration enzyme genes of Klebsiella pneumoniae was cloned, and an expression vector for these genes (pRSF_pduCDEGHOQS) was constructed. Recombinant E. coli harboring pRSF_pduCDEGHOQS with 1,2-PD synthetic pathway (pKK_mde) genes, which was constructed in our previous report (Urano et al., Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 99, 2001-2008, 2015), produced 16.1 mM of 1-propanol from d-glucose with a molar yield of 0.36 mol/mol after 72 h cultivation. 29.9 mM of 1-propanol was formed from l-rhamnose with a molar yield of 0.81 mol/mol using E. coli carrying only pRSF_pduCDEGHOQS. In addition, 1-propanol production from glycerol was achieved by addition of the ATP-dependent dihydroxyacetone kinase gene to E. coli harboring pKK_mde and pRSF_pduCDEGOQS. In all cases, 1-propanol production was achieved by adding only a small amount of AdoCbl.
Shimwellia blattae is an enteric bacterium and produces endogenous enzymes that convert 1,2-propanediol (1,2-PD) to 1-propanol, which is expected to be used as a fuel substitute and a precursor of polypropylene. Therefore, if S. blattae could be induced to generate its own 1,2-PD from sugars, it might be possible to produce 1-propanol from sugars with this microorganism. Here, two 1,2-PD production pathways were constructed in S. blattae, resulting in two methods for 1-propanol production with the bacterium. One method employed the L-rhamnose utilization pathway, in which L-rhamnose is split into dihydroxyacetone phosphate and 1,2-PD. When wild-type S. blattae was cultured with L-rhamnose, an accumulation of 1,2-PD was observed. The other method for producing 1,2-PD was to introduce an engineered 1,2-PD production pathway from glucose into S. blattae. In both cases, the produced 1,2-PD was then converted to 1-propanol by 1,2-PD converting enzymes, whose production was induced by the addition of glycerol.
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