The synthesis of vitamin D3 precursor 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) by microbial fermentation has much attracted attention owing to its advantages of environmental protection. In this study, Saccharomyces cerevisiae was engineered for a de novo biosynthesis of 7-DHC. First, seven essential genes (six endogenous genes and one heterologous gene) were overexpressed, and the ROX1 gene (heme-dependent repressor of hypoxic genes) was knocked out. The resulting strain produced 82.6 mg/L 7-DHC from glucose. Then, we predicted five gene knockout targets for 7-DHC overproduction by the reconstruction of genome-scale metabolic model. GDH1 gene knockout increased the 7-DHC titer from 82.6 to 101.5 mg/L, and the specific growth rate of the ΔGDH1 mutant was also increased by 28%. Next, Ty1 transposon in S. cerevisiae was applied to increase the copies of the ERG1 gene and DHCR24 gene, resulting in a 120% increase in 7-DHC titer to 223.3 mg/L. Besides, to optimize the metabolic flux distribution, Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats interference (CRISPRi) system was used to dynamically inhibit the competitive pathway, and the best binding site of ERG6 (delta (24)-sterol C-methyltransferase) promoter was screened out. The OD 600 value of ERG6 regulated cells increased by 43% than knocking out ERG6 directly, and 7-DHC titer increased to 365.5 mg/L in a shake flask. Finally, the 7-DHC titer reached 1328 mg/L in 3-L bioreactor and the specific titer of 7-DHC reached up to 114.7 mg/g dry cell weight). Overall, this study constructed a yeast chassis for the highly efficient production of 7-DHC by systems metabolic engineering.
Candida tropicalis can grow with alkanes or plant oils as the sole carbon source, and its industrial application thus has great potential. However, the choice of a suitable genetic operating system can effectively increase the speed of metabolic engineering. MazF functions as an mRNA interferase that preferentially cleaves single-stranded mRNAs at ACA sequences to inhibit protein synthesis, leading to cell growth arrest. Here, we constructed a suicide plasmid named pPICPJ-mazF that uses the mazF gene of Escherichia coli as a counterselectable marker for the markerless editing of C. tropicalis genes to increase the rate of conversion of oils into long-chain dicarboxylic acids. To reduce the β-oxidation of fatty acids, the carnitine acetyltransferase gene (CART) was deleted using the gene editing system, and the yield of long-chain acids from the strain was increased to 8.27 g/L. By two homologous single exchanges, the promoters of both the cytochrome P450 gene and the NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase gene were subsequently replaced by the constitutively expressed promoter pGAP, and the production of long-chain dicarboxylic acids by the generated strain (C. tropicalis PJPP1702) reached 11.39 g/L. The results of fed-batch fermentation showed that the yield of long-chain acids from the strain was further increased to 32.84 g/L, which was 11.4 times higher than that from the original strain. The results also showed that the pPICPJ-mazF-based markerless editing system may be more suited for completing the genetic editing of C. tropicalis.
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