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Engineering of a highly efficient Escherichia coli strain for mevalonate fermentation through chromosomal integration

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dc.contributor.author Wang J.
dc.contributor.author Niyompanich S.
dc.contributor.author Tai Y.-S.
dc.contributor.author Wang J.
dc.contributor.author Bai W.
dc.contributor.author Mahida P.
dc.contributor.author Gao T.
dc.contributor.author Zhang K.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-04-05T03:24:47Z
dc.date.available 2021-04-05T03:24:47Z
dc.date.issued 2016
dc.identifier.issn 992240
dc.identifier.other 2-s2.0-84997173327
dc.identifier.uri https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/13580
dc.identifier.uri https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84997173327&doi=10.1128%2fAEM.02178-16&partnerID=40&md5=b951855ffd7b58198ce5e5ce4efb3204
dc.description.abstract Chromosomal integration of heterologous metabolic pathways is optimal for industrially relevant fermentation, as plasmidbased fermentation causes extra metabolic burden and genetic instabilities. In this work, chromosomal integration was adapted for the production of mevalonate, which can be readily converted into β-methyl-δ-valerolactone, a monomer for the production of mechanically tunable polyesters. The mevalonate pathway, driven by a constitutive promoter, was integrated into the chromosome of Escherichia coli to replace the native fermentation gene adhE or ldhA. The engineered strains (CMEV-1 and CMEV-2) did not require inducer or antibiotic and showed slightly higher maximal productivities (0.38 to~0.43 g/liter/h) and yields (67.8 to~71.4% of the maximum theoretical yield) than those of the plasmid-based fermentation. Since the glycolysis pathway is the first module for mevalonate synthesis, atpFH deletion was employed to improve the glycolytic rate and the production rate of mevalonate. Shake flask fermentation results showed that the deletion of atpFH in CMEV-1 resulted in a 2.1- fold increase in the maximum productivity. Furthermore, enhancement of the downstream pathway by integrating two copies of the mevalonate pathway genes into the chromosome further improved the mevalonate yield. Finally, our fedbatch fermentation showed that, with deletion of the atpFH and sucA genes and integration of two copies of the mevalonate pathway genes into the chromosome, the engineered strain CMEV-7 exhibited both high maximal productivity (~1.01 g/liter/h) and high yield (86.1% of the maximum theoretical yield, 30 g/liter mevalonate from 61 g/liter glucose after 48 h in a shake flask). © 2016, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
dc.subject Bottles
dc.subject Escherichia coli
dc.subject Genes
dc.subject Integration
dc.subject Metabolism
dc.subject Productivity
dc.subject Chromosomal integration
dc.subject Constitutive promoters
dc.subject Fed-batch fermentation
dc.subject Genetic instability
dc.subject Maximum productivity
dc.subject Metabolic pathways
dc.subject Mevalonate pathway
dc.subject Shake flask fermentations
dc.subject Fermentation
dc.subject bioengineering
dc.subject chromosome
dc.subject fecal coliform
dc.subject fermentation
dc.subject gene expression
dc.subject glucose
dc.subject metabolism
dc.subject plasmid
dc.subject polymer
dc.subject Escherichia coli
dc.subject glucose
dc.subject mevalonic acid
dc.subject bacterial chromosome
dc.subject Escherichia coli
dc.subject fermentation
dc.subject genetics
dc.subject metabolic engineering
dc.subject metabolism
dc.subject plasmid
dc.subject Chromosomes, Bacterial
dc.subject Escherichia coli
dc.subject Fermentation
dc.subject Glucose
dc.subject Metabolic Engineering
dc.subject Mevalonic Acid
dc.subject Plasmids
dc.title Engineering of a highly efficient Escherichia coli strain for mevalonate fermentation through chromosomal integration
dc.type Article
dc.rights.holder Scopus
dc.identifier.bibliograpycitation Applied and Environmental Microbiology. Vol 82, No.24 (2016), p.7176-7184
dc.identifier.doi 10.1128/AEM.02178-16


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