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1.
The effects of hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives as growth substrates on the polar lipid fractions of an Acinetobacter isolate were studied. Tetradecane, hexadecane, and octadecane resulted in the incorporation of substantial quantities of equivalent-chain-length fatty acids into cellular lipids. Cells cultured on nonane, the only odd-numbered alkane tested, contained both odd- and even-chain fatty acids. The n-alkane dotriacontane (32 carbons), 1-chlorohexadecane, 1-chlorododecane, 1-chlorodecane, and 1-phenyldodecane yielded significant amounts of odd-chain fatty acids. A subterminal oxidative pathway is believed to account for these results. Cells grown on long-chain alcohols exhibited fatty acid profiles nearly identical to those of cells grown on the corresponding alkanes.  相似文献   

2.
Rapid global industrialization in the past decades has led to extensive utilization of fossil fuels, which resulted in pressing environmental problems due to excessive carbon emission. This prompted increasing interest in developing advanced biofuels with higher energy density to substitute fossil fuels and bio‐alkane has gained attention as an ideal drop‐in fuel candidate. Production of alkanes in bacteria has been widely studied but studies on the utilization of the robust yeast host, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, for alkane biosynthesis have been lacking. In this proof‐of‐principle study, we present the unprecedented engineering of S. cerevisiae for conversion of free fatty acids to alkanes. A fatty acid α‐dioxygenase from Oryza sativa (rice) was expressed in S. cerevisiae to transform C12–18 free fatty acids to C11–17 aldehydes. Co‐expression of a cyanobacterial aldehyde deformylating oxygenase converted the aldehydes to the desired alkanes. We demonstrated the versatility of the pathway by performing whole‐cell biocatalytic conversion of exogenous free fatty acid feedstocks into alkanes as well as introducing the pathway into a free fatty acid overproducer for de novo production of alkanes from simple sugar. The results from this work are anticipated to advance the development of yeast hosts for alkane production. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 232–237. © 2016 The Authors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
4.
We have converted cytochrome P450 BM-3 from Bacillus megaterium (P450 BM-3), a medium-chain (C12-C18) fatty acid monooxygenase, into a highly efficient catalyst for the conversion of alkanes to alcohols. The evolved P450 BM-3 exhibits higher turnover rates than any reported biocatalyst for the selective oxidation of hydrocarbons of small to medium chain length (C3-C8). Unlike naturally occurring alkane hydroxylases, the best known of which are the large complexes of methane monooxygenase (MMO) and membrane-associated non-heme iron alkane monooxygenase (AlkB), the evolved enzyme is monomeric, soluble, and requires no additional proteins for catalysis. The evolved alkane hydroxylase was found to be even more active on fatty acids than wild-type BM-3, which was already one of the most efficient fatty acid monooxgenases known. A broad range of substrates including the gaseous alkane propane induces the low to high spin shift that activates the enzyme. This catalyst for alkane hydroxylation at room temperature opens new opportunities for clean, selective hydrocarbon activation for chemical synthesis and bioremediation.  相似文献   

5.
The objective of this study was to implement direct sunlight-driven conversion of CO2 into a naturally excreted ready-to-use fuel. We engineered four different synthetic metabolic modules for biosynthesis of short-to medium-chain length hydrocarbons in the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In module 1, the combination of a truncated clostridial n-butanol pathway with over-expression of the native cyanobacterial aldehyde deformylating oxygenase resulted in small quantities of propane when cultured under closed conditions. Direct conversion of CO2 into propane was only observed in strains with CRISPRi-mediated repression of three native putative aldehyde reductases. In module 2, three different pathways towards pentane were evaluated based on the polyunsaturated fatty acid linoleic acid as an intermediate. Through combinatorial evaluation of reaction ingredients, it was concluded that linoleic acid undergoes a spontaneous non-enzymatic reaction to yield pentane and hexanal. When Synechocystis was added to the reaction, hexanal was converted into 1-hexanol, but there was no further stimulation of pentane biosynthesis even in the Synechocystis strains expressing GmLOX1. For modules 3 and 4, several different acyl-ACP thioesterases were evaluated in combination with two different decarboxylases. Small quantities of 1-heptene and 1-nonene were observed in strains expressing the desaturase-like enzyme UndB from Pseudomonas mendocina in combination with C8–C10 preferring thioesterases ('CaFatB3.5 and 'ChoFatB2.2). When UndB instead was combined with a C12-specific 'UcFatB1 thioesterase, this resulted in a ten-fold increase of alkene biosynthesis. When UndB was replaced with the light-dependent FAP decarboxylase, both undecane and tridecane accumulated, albeit with a 10-fold drop in productivity. Preliminary optimization of the RBS, promoter and gene order in some of the synthetic operons resulted in improved 1-alkene productivity, reaching a titer of 230 mg/L after 10 d with 15% carbon partitioning. In conclusion, the direct bioconversion of CO2 into secreted and ready-to-use hydrocarbon fuel was implemented with several different metabolic systems. Optimal productivity was observed with UndB and a C12 chain-length specific thioesterase, although further optimization of the entire biosynthetic system is still possible.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Enzymes of the AlkB and CYP153 families catalyze the first step in the catabolism of medium-chain-length alkanes, selective oxidation of the alkane to the 1-alkanol, and enable their host organisms to utilize alkanes as carbon sources. Small, gaseous alkanes, however, are converted to alkanols by evolutionarily unrelated methane monooxygenases. Propane and butane can be oxidized by CYP enzymes engineered in the laboratory, but these produce predominantly the 2-alkanols. Here we report the in vivo-directed evolution of two medium-chain-length terminal alkane hydroxylases, the integral membrane di-iron enzyme AlkB from Pseudomonas putida GPo1 and the class II-type soluble CYP153A6 from Mycobacterium sp. strain HXN-1500, to enhance their activity on small alkanes. We established a P. putida evolution system that enables selection for terminal alkane hydroxylase activity and used it to select propane- and butane-oxidizing enzymes based on enhanced growth complementation of an adapted P. putida GPo12(pGEc47ΔB) strain. The resulting enzymes exhibited higher rates of 1-butanol production from butane and maintained their preference for terminal hydroxylation. This in vivo evolution system could be useful for directed evolution of enzymes that function efficiently to hydroxylate small alkanes in engineered hosts.Microbial utilization and degradation of alkanes was discovered almost a century ago (27). Since then, several enzyme families capable of hydroxylating alkanes to alkanols, the first step in alkane degradation, have been identified and categorized based on their preferred substrates (30). The soluble and particulate methane monooxygenases (sMMO and pMMO) and the related propane monooxygenase and butane monooxygenase (BMO) are specialized on gaseous small-chain alkanes (C1 to C4), while medium-chain (C5 to C16) alkane hydroxylation seems to be the domain of the CYP153 and AlkB enzyme families.Conversion of C1 to C4 alkanes to alkanols is of particular interest for producing liquid fuels or chemical precursors from natural gas. The MMO-like enzymes that catalyze this reaction in nature, however, exhibit limited stability or poor heterologous expression (30) and have not been suitable for use in a recombinant host that can be engineered to optimize substrate or cofactor delivery. Alkane monooxygenases often cometabolize a wider range of alkanes than those which support growth (12). We wished to determine whether it is possible to engineer a medium-chain alkane monooxygenase to hydroxylate small alkanes, thereby circumventing difficulties associated with engineering MMO-like enzymes as well as investigating the fundamental question of whether enzymes unrelated to MMO can support growth on small alkanes.The most intensively studied medium-chain alkane hydroxylases are the AlkB enzymes (2, 20, 29), especially AlkB from Pseudomonas putida GPo1 (13, 28, 32, 35). While most members of the AlkB family act on C10 or longer alkanes, some accept alkanes as small as C5 (30). A recent study (12) indicated that AlkB from P. putida GPo1 may also be involved in propane and butane assimilation. AlkB selectively oxidizes at the terminal carbon to produce the 1-alkanols. No systematic protein engineering studies have been conducted on this di-iron integral membrane enzyme, although selection and site-directed mutagenesis efforts identified one amino acid residue that sterically determines long-chain alkane degradation (35).The most recent addition to the known biological alkane-hydroxylating repertoire is the CYP153 family of heme-containing cytochrome P450 monooxygenases. Although their activity was detected as early as 1981 (1), the first CYP153 was characterized only in 2001 (16). Additional CYP153 enzymes were identified and studied more recently (9, 10, 31). These soluble class II-type three-component P450 enzymes and the AlkB enzymes are the main actors in medium-chain-length alkane hydroxylation by the cultivated bacteria analyzed to date (31). CYP153 monooxygenases have been the subject of biochemical studies (9, 16, 19), and their substrate range has been explored (10, 14). Known substrates include C5 to C11 alkanes. The best-characterized member, CYP153A6, hydroxylates its preferred substrate octane predominantly (>95%) at the terminal position (9).Recent studies have shown that high activities on small alkanes can be obtained by engineering bacterial P450 enzymes such as P450cam (CYP101; camphor hydroxylase) and P450 BM3 (CYP102A; a fatty acid hydroxylase) (8, 36). The resulting enzymes, however, hydroxylate propane and higher alkanes primarily at the more energetically favorable subterminal positions; highly selective terminal hydroxylation is difficult to achieve by engineering a subterminal hydroxylase (22). We wished to determine whether a small-alkane terminal hydroxylase could be obtained instead by directed evolution of a longer-chain alkane hydroxylase that exhibits this desirable regioselectivity. For this study, we chose to engineer AlkB from P. putida GPo1 and CYP153A6 from Mycobacterium sp. strain HXN-1500 (9, 33) to enhance activity on butane. Because terminal alkane hydroxylation is the first step of alkane catabolism in P. putida GPo1, we reasoned that it should be possible to establish an in vivo evolution system that uses growth on small alkanes to select for enzyme variants exhibiting the desired activities.The recombinant host Pseudomonas putida GPo12(pGEc47ΔB) was engineered specifically for complementation studies with terminal alkane hydroxylases and was used previously to characterize members of the AlkB and CYP153 families (26, 31). This strain is a derivative of the natural isolate P. putida GPo1 lacking its endogenous OCT plasmid (octane assimilation) (5) but containing cosmid pGEc47ΔB, which carries all genes comprising the alk machinery necessary for alkane utilization, with the exception of a deleted alkB gene (34). We show that this host can be complemented by a plasmid-encoded library of alkane hydroxylases and that growth of the mixed culture on butane leads to enrichment of novel butane-oxidizing terminal hydroxylases.  相似文献   

8.
Sodium [1-14C]acetate and [1-14C]stearic acid were readily incorporated into hydrocarbons, secondary alcohols, wax esters, aldehydes, primary alcohols, and fatty acids in young pea leaves (Pisum sativum). Dithioerythritol, dithiothreitol, and mercaptoethanol (but not glutathione and cysteine) severely inhibited the incorporation of labeled acetate into alkanes and secondary alcohols with accumulation of label in wax ester and aldehyde fractions. Detailed radio gas-chromatographic analyses of the fatty acids of both the surface lipid components and internal lipids showed that dithioerythritol and mercaptoethanol specifically inhibited n-hentriacontane (C31) synthesis and caused accumulation of C32 aldehyde, suggesting that the inhibition was at or near the terminal step in alkane biosynthesis, presumably decarboxylation. Trichloroacetate, at a concentration that inhibited C31 alkane synthesis but not the synthesis of alcohols (C26 and C28) specifically inhibited the formation of C32 aldehyde but not that of the C26 or C28 aldehyde. From these results, it is concluded that the C32 aldehyde is derived from the C32 acyl derivative which is the precursor of C31 alkane.  相似文献   

9.
Alkanes are widely distributed in nature and impaired alkane synthesis was implicated in certain neurological disorders. However, the mechanism of synthesis of alkanes in animals is unknown. Our search to find a convenient animal tissue to study alkane biosynthesis resulted in the finding that the uropygial gland (a modified sebaceous gland) of the eared grebe (Podiceps nigricollis) produces large amounts of alkanes. These alkanes, which constitute 35-41% of the total lipid produced, are mainly C21, C23, C25, and C27 n-alkanes. Cell free homogenates of this tissue synthesized alkanes from both fatty acid and aldehyde in the absence of O2. Differential centrifugation of the homogenates indicated that this activity was located in the microsomal fraction. With isolated microsomes conversion of fatty acid to alkane required CoA, ATP, and NADH whereas conversion of an aldehyde to alkane did not require the addition of cofactors. That the final step in alkane synthesis is a decarbonylation was shown by the stoichiometric production of heptadecane and CO from octadecanal. CO was identified by adsorption to RhCl [(C6H6)3P]3 and oxidation of the trapped CO to CO2 by watergas shift reaction. The enzyme preparation also catalyzed incorporation of 14C from 14CO into octadecanal showing the reversible nature of the decarbonylase. This decarbonylase had a sharp pH optimum at 7.0, a Kapp of 180 microM and a V1/2 of 90 rho mol/min/mg protein for octadecanal. The enzyme was inhibited by the metal chelators EDTA, O-phenanthroline, and 8-hydroxyquinoline, but not by KCN. It was stimulated nearly 3-fold by 5 microM 2-mercaptoethanol and inhibited by the presence of O2. During the conversion of [1-3H]octadecanal to heptadecane, 3H was lost to water and 3H from 3H2O was incorporated into the alkane generated from unlabeled octadecanal. The mechanism of the decarbonylation and the nature of the enzyme remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

10.
The psychrotroph Rhodococcus sp. strain Q15 was examined for its ability to degrade individual n-alkanes and diesel fuel at low temperatures, and its alkane catabolic pathway was investigated by biochemical and genetic techniques. At 0 and 5°C, Q15 mineralized the short-chain alkanes dodecane and hexadecane to a greater extent than that observed for the long-chain alkanes octacosane and dotriacontane. Q15 utilized a broad range of aliphatics (C10 to C21 alkanes, branched alkanes, and a substituted cyclohexane) present in diesel fuel at 5°C. Mineralization of hexadecane at 5°C was significantly greater in both hydrocarbon-contaminated and pristine soil microcosms seeded with Q15 cells than in uninoculated control soil microcosms. The detection of hexadecane and dodecane metabolic intermediates (1-hexadecanol and 2-hexadecanol and 1-dodecanol and 2-dodecanone, respectively) by solid-phase microextraction–gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and the utilization of potential metabolic intermediates indicated that Q15 oxidizes alkanes by both the terminal oxidation pathway and the subterminal oxidation pathway. Genetic characterization by PCR and nucleotide sequence analysis indicated that Q15 possesses an aliphatic aldehyde dehydrogenase gene highly homologous to the Rhodococcus erythropolis thcA gene. Rhodococcus sp. strain Q15 possessed two large plasmids of approximately 90 and 115 kb (shown to mediate Cd resistance) which were not required for alkane mineralization, although the 90-kb plasmid enhanced mineralization of some alkanes and growth on diesel oil at both 5 and 25°C.  相似文献   

11.
A soil consortium was tested for its ability to degrade reformulated gasoline, containing methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE). Reformulated gasoline was rapidly degraded to completion. However, MTBE tested alone was not degraded. A screening was carried out to identify compounds in gasoline that participate in cometabolism with MTBE. Aromatic compounds (benzene, toluene, xylenes) and compounds structurally similar to MTBE (tert-butanol, 2,2-dimethylbutane, 2,2,4-trimethylpentane) were unable to cometabolize MTBE. Cyclohexane was resistant to degradation. However, all n-alkanes tested for cometabolic activity (pentane, hexane, heptane) did enable the biodegradation of MTBE. Among the alkanes tested, pentane was the most efficient (200 &mgr;g/day). Upon the depletion of pentane, the consortium stopped degrading MTBE. When the consortium was spiked with pentane, MTBE degradation continued. When the ratio of MTBE to pentane was increased, the amount of MTBE degraded by the consortium was higher. Finally, diethylether was tested for cometabolic degradation with MTBE. Both compounds were degraded, but the process differed from that observed with pentane.  相似文献   

12.
The first and key step in alkane metabolism is the terminal hydroxylation of alkanes to 1-alkanols, a reaction catalyzed by a family of integral-membrane diiron enzymes related to Pseudomonas putida GPo1 AlkB, by a diverse group of methane, propane, and butane monooxygenases and by some membrane-bound cytochrome P450s. Recently, a family of cytoplasmic P450 enzymes was identified in prokaryotes that allow their host to grow on aliphatic alkanes. One member of this family, CYP153A6 from Mycobacterium sp. HXN-1500, hydroxylates medium-chain-length alkanes (C6 to C11) to 1-alkanols with a maximal turnover number of 70 min(-1) and has a regiospecificity of > or =95% for the terminal carbon atom position. Spectroscopic binding studies showed that C6-to-C11 aliphatic alkanes bind in the active site with Kd values varying from approximately 20 nM to 3.7 microM. Longer alkanes bind more strongly than shorter alkanes, while the introduction of sterically hindering groups reduces the affinity. This suggests that the substrate-binding pocket is shaped such that linear alkanes are preferred. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy in the presence of the substrate showed the formation of an enzyme-substrate complex, which confirmed the binding of substrates observed in optical titrations. To rationalize the experimental observations on a molecular scale, homology modeling of CYP153A6 and docking of substrates were used to provide the first insight into structural features required for terminal alkane hydroxylation.  相似文献   

13.
Park MO 《Journal of bacteriology》2005,187(4):1426-1429
Alkane biosynthesis in the bacterium Vibrio furnissii M1 involves the synthesis of long-chain alkanes via 1-alcohol. Evidence for this novel pathway are the following. (i) Both even- and odd-carbon-number n-alkanes were produced from glucose, while only even-carbon-number fatty acids were produced in V. furnissii M1. This result cannot be explained by the decarbonylation pathway. (ii) Pentadecane and hexadecane were produced from 1-hexadecanoic acid by membrane fractions of V. furnissii M1, and radioisotope precursor-tracer experiments, in which 1-[1-(14)C]hexadecanoic acid was fed, identified the corresponding alcohol, aldehyde, and alkane derivatives. Since all metabolites maintained the radioisotope label at 1-C, they were produced by a pathway in which the carbon structure was retained, i.e., a reduction pathway. (iii) n-Hexadecane was produced when 1-hexadecanol was fed to membrane preparations.  相似文献   

14.
A bacterium, PG-3-2, capable of butane-utilization as a sole carbon source was isolated from Puguang oilfield in Sichuan Province, China and identified as Arthrobacter sp. by 16S rRNA gene sequence and morphology characteristics. Butane-saturated medium was defined as optimal for the growth of PG-3-2. Proliferation of PG-3-2 was enhanced at low butanol concentrations (≤50 mM) and repressed at high concentrations (≥100 mM). Growth of strain PG-3-2 was supported by alkanes from C2 to C10 (except pentane) and various carbon substrates including primary alcohols, secondary alcohols, carboxylic acids, aldehydes, ketones, but not methane or its oxidation products. The rate of butane degradation by PG-3-2 was relatively high during the lag phase and prophase of the exponential phase. A bmoX gene, which encodes the alpha hydroxylase subunit of butane monooxygenase, was amplified from the genome of this bacterium. Sequence analysis revealed a high level of homology with alkane monooxygenase, thus indicating the existence of a novel bmoX gene involved in the butane degradation pathway in this Arthrobacter strain.  相似文献   

15.
The industrial yeasts Candida tropicalis or Candida cloacae are able to grow on a variety of long chain alkanes and fatty acids as the sole carbon source. The complete oxidation of these substrates involves two sequential oxidative pathways: omega-oxidation, comprising the P450 alkane oxidase, a flavin-dependent membrane-bound long chain fatty alcohol oxidase [FAO] and a possible separate aldehyde oxidase [F.M. Dickinson, C. Wadforth, Purification and some properties of alcohol oxidase from alkane-grown Candida tropicalis, Biochem. J. 282 (1992) 325-331], and the beta-oxidation pathway, which utilises acylCoA substrates. We recently purified the membrane-bound long chain fatty alcohol oxidase FAO1 and confirmed it is also a c-type haemoprotein. Multiple isoforms may exist for many of these long chain fatty alcohol oxidases and the in vivo requirements for individual genes with respect to specific substrates are still being elucidated. In vitro reconstitution experiments have demonstrated that in Candida maltosa, the cytochrome P450 52A3 gene product can completely oxidise alkanes to dicarboxylic acids [U. Scheller, T. Zimmer, D. Becher, F. Schauer, W. Schunck, Oxygenation Cascade in Conversion of n-Alkanes to, -Dioic Acids Catalyzed by Cytochrome P450 52A3, J. Biol. Chem. 273 (1998) 32528-32534], potentially obviating requirements for a long chain alcohol oxidase. Here, we directly determine in vivo the role of the long chain alcohol oxidase (FAOT) in C. tropicalis, grown on a variety of substrates, followed by gene deletion. The faot double knockout has no detectable faot activity and is incapable of growth on octadecane, but it grows well on oleic acid, palmitic acid and shorter chain alkanes/fatty acids. A spontaneous mutation[s] may have occurred in the faot double gene knockout of C. tropicalis resulting in its inability to grow on oleic acid and hexadecane. The mutations demonstrate that different pathways of octadecane, hexadecane, oleic acid and palmitic acid utilisation exist in C. tropicalis.  相似文献   

16.
The development of renewable alternatives to diesel and jet fuels is highly desirable for the heavy transportation sector, and would offer benefits over the production and use of short‐chain alcohols for personal transportation. Here, we report the development of a metabolically engineered strain of Escherichia coli that overproduces medium‐chain length fatty acids via three basic modifications: elimination of β‐oxidation, overexpression of the four subunits of acetyl‐CoA carboxylase, and expression of a plant acyl–acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterase from Umbellularia californica (BTE). The expression level of BTE was optimized by comparing fatty acid production from strains harboring BTE on plasmids with four different copy numbers. Expression of BTE from low copy number plasmids resulted in the highest fatty acid production. Up to a seven‐fold increase in total fatty acid production was observed in engineered strains over a negative control strain (lacking β‐oxidation), with a composition dominated by C12 and C14 saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. Next, a strategy for producing undecane via a combination of biotechnology and heterogeneous catalysis is demonstrated. Fatty acids were extracted from a culture of an overproducing strain into an alkane phase and fed to a Pd/C plug flow reactor, where the extracted fatty acids were decarboxylated into saturated alkanes. The result is an enriched alkane stream that can be recycled for continuous extractions. Complete conversion of C12 fatty acids extracted from culture to alkanes has been demonstrated yielding a concentration of 0.44 g L?1 (culture volume) undecane. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010;106: 193–202. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Fatty acids are central hydrocarbon intermediates in the biosynthesis of diesel from renewable sources. We have engineered an Escherichia coli cell line that produces 4.5 g/L/day total fatty acid in a fed-batch fermentation. However, further enhancement of fatty acid biosynthesis in this cell line proved unpredictable. To develop a more reliable engineering strategy, a cell-free system was developed that enabled direct, quantitative investigation of fatty acid biosynthesis and its regulation in E. coli. Using this system, the strong dependence of fatty acid synthesis on malonyl-CoA availability and several important phenomena in fatty acid synthesis were verified. Results from this cell-free system were confirmed via the generation and analysis of metabolically engineered strains of E. coli. Our quantitative findings highlight the enormous catalytic potential of the E. coli fatty acid biosynthetic pathway, and target specific steps for protein and metabolic engineering to enhance the catalytic conversion of glucose into biodiesel.  相似文献   

18.
The alkane-assimilating yeast Yarrowia lipolytica degrades very efficiently hydrophobic substrates such as n-alkanes, fatty acids, fats and oils for which it has specific metabolic pathways. An overview of the oxidative degradation pathways for alkanes and triglycerides in Y. lipolytica is given, with new insights arising from the recent genome sequencing of this yeast. This includes the interaction of hydrophobic substrates with yeast cells, their uptake and transport, the primary alkane oxidation to the corresponding fatty alcohols and then by different enzymes to fatty acids, and the subsequent degradation in peroxisomal beta-oxidation or storage into lipid bodies. Several enzymes involved in hydrophobic substrate utilisation belong to multigene families, such as lipases/esterases (LIP genes), cytochromes P450 (ALK genes) and peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidases (POX genes). Examples are presented demonstrating that wild-type and genetically engineered strains of Y. lipolytica can be used for alkane and fatty-acid bioconversion, such as aroma production, for production of SCP and SCO, for citric acid production, in bioremediation, in fine chemistry, for steroid biotransformation, and in food industry. These examples demonstrate distinct advantages of Y. lipolytica for their use in bioconversion reactions of biotechnologically interesting hydrophobic substrates.  相似文献   

19.
Alkanes of defined carbon chain lengths can serve as alternatives to petroleum-based fuels. Recently, microbial pathways of alkane biosynthesis have been identified and enabled the production of alkanes in non-native producing microorganisms using metabolic engineering strategies. The chemoautotrophic bacterium Cupriavidus necator has great potential for producing chemicals from CO2: it is known to have one of the highest growth rate among natural autotrophic bacteria and under nutrient imbalance it directs most of its carbon flux to the synthesis of the acetyl-CoA derived polymer, polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), (up to 80% of intracellular content). Alkane synthesis pathway from Synechococcus elongatus (2 genes coding an acyl-ACP reductase and an aldehyde deformylating oxygenase) was heterologously expressed in a C. necator mutant strain deficient in the PHB synthesis pathway. Under heterotrophic condition on fructose we showed that under nitrogen limitation, in presence of an organic phase (decane), the strain produced up to 670 mg/L total hydrocarbons containing 435 mg/l of alkanes consisting of 286 mg/l of pentadecane, 131 mg/l of heptadecene, 18 mg/l of heptadecane, and 236 mg/l of hexadecanal. We report here the highest level of alka(e)nes production by an engineered C. necator to date. We also demonstrated the first reported alka(e)nes production by a non-native alkane producer from CO2 as the sole carbon source.  相似文献   

20.
Cyanobacteria alkane synthetic pathway has been heterologously constructed in many microbial hosts. It is by far the most studied and reliable alkane generating pathway. Aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (i.e., ADO, key enzyme in this pathway) obtained from different cyanobacteria species showed diverse catalytic abilities. This work indicated that single aldehyde reductase deletions were beneficial to Nostoc punctiforme ADO-depended alkane production in Escherichia coli even better than double deletions. Fatty acid metabolism regulator (FadR) overexpression and low temperature increased C18:1 fatty acid supply, and in turn stimulated C18:1-derived heptadecene production, suggesting that supplying ADO with preferred substrate was important to overall alkane yield improvement. Using combinational methods, 1 g/L alkane was obtained in fed-batch fermentation with heptadecene accounting for nearly 84% of total alkane.  相似文献   

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