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Engineered Corynebacterium glutamicum as an endotoxin-free platform strain for lactate-based polyester production
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Engineered Corynebacterium glutamicum as an endotoxin-free platform strain for lactate-based polyester production

Yuyang Song, Ken'ichiro Matsumoto, Miwa Yamada, Aoi Gohda, Christopher J. Brigham, Anthony J. Sinskey and Seiichi Taguchi
Applied microbiology and biotechnology, Vol.93(5), pp.1917-1925
03/01/2012
PMID: 22127753

Abstract

Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology
The first biosynthetic system for lactate (LA)-based polyesters was previously created in recombinant Escherichia coli (Taguchi et al. 2008). Here, we have begun efforts to upgrade the prototype polymer production system to a practical stage by using metabolically engineered Gram-positive bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum as an endotoxin-free platform. We designed metabolic pathways in C. glutamicum to generate monomer substrates, lactyl-CoA (LA-CoA), and 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA (3HB-CoA), for the copolymerization catalyzed by the LA-polymerizing enzyme (LPE). LA-CoA was synthesized by D-lactate dehydrogenase and propionyl-CoA transferase, while 3HB-CoA was supplied by beta-ketothiolase (PhaA) and NADPH-dependent acetoacetyl-CoA reductase (PhaB). The functional expression of these enzymes led to a production of P(LA-co-3HB) with high LA fractions (96.8 mol%). The omission of PhaA and PhaB from this pathway led to a further increase in LA fraction up to 99.3 mol%. The newly engineered C. glutamicum potentially serves as a food-grade and biomedically applicable platform for the production of poly(lactic acid)-like polyester.

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