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1.
Fatty acyl–acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterase (acyl-ACP TE) from Streptococcus pyogenes (strain MGAS10270) was codon-optimized and expressed in Escherichia coli K-12 W3110 and Escherichia coli K-12 MG1655. By employing codon-optimized S. pyogenes acyl-ACP TE to improve the total free fatty acids (FFAs) and to tailor the composition of FFAs, high-specificity production of saturated fatty acids (C12, C14) and unsaturated fatty acids (C18:1 C18:2) was achieved in recombinants. E. coli SGJS41 and SGJS46 (codon-optimized acyl-ACP TE of S. pyogenes) demonstrated the highest intracellular total FFA content (339 mg/l vs 342 mg/l); in particular, the content of C12 and C14 FFAs was about 3–5 fold, and the content of C18:1 and C18:2 FFAs was about 8–42 fold higher than that in the control E. coli and E. coli JES1017 (original acyl-ACP TE of S. pyogenes).  相似文献   

2.
Constructing microbial biocatalysts that produce biorenewables at economically viable yields and titers is often hampered by product toxicity. For production of short chain fatty acids, membrane damage is considered the primary mechanism of toxicity, particularly in regards to membrane integrity. Previous engineering efforts in Escherichia coli to increase membrane integrity, with the goal of increasing fatty acid tolerance and production, have had mixed results. Herein, a novel approach was used to reconstruct the E. coli membrane by enabling production of a novel membrane component. Specifically, trans unsaturated fatty acids (TUFA) were produced and incorporated into the membrane of E. coli MG1655 by expression of cis-trans isomerase (Cti) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. While the engineered strain was found to have no increase in membrane integrity, a significant decrease in membrane fluidity was observed, meaning that membrane polarization and rigidity were increased by TUFA incorporation. As a result, tolerance to exogenously added octanoic acid and production of octanoic acid were both increased relative to the wild-type strain. This membrane engineering strategy to improve octanoic acid tolerance was found to require fine-tuning of TUFA abundance. Besides improving tolerance and production of carboxylic acids, TUFA production also enabled increased tolerance in E. coli to other bio-products, e.g. alcohols, organic acids, aromatic compounds, a variety of adverse industrial conditions, e.g. low pH, high temperature, and also elevated styrene production, another versatile bio-chemical product. TUFA permitted enhanced growth due to alleviation of bio–product toxicity, demonstrating the general effectiveness of this membrane engineering strategy towards improving strain robustness.  相似文献   

3.
Short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) biosynthesis is pertinent to production of biofuels, industrial compounds, and pharmaceuticals from renewable resources. To expand on Escherichia coli SCFA products, we previously implemented a coenzyme A (CoA)-dependent pathway that condenses acetyl-CoA to a diverse group of short-chain fatty acyl-CoAs. To increase product titers and reduce premature pathway termination products, we conducted in vivo and in vitro analyses to understand and improve the specificity of the acyl-CoA thioesterase enzyme, which releases fatty acids from CoA. A total of 62 putative bacterial thioesterases, including 23 from the cow rumen microbiome, were inserted into a pathway that condenses acetyl-CoA to an acyl-CoA molecule derived from exogenously provided propionic or isobutyric acid. Functional screening revealed thioesterases that increase production of saturated (valerate), unsaturated (trans-2-pentenoate), and branched (4-methylvalerate) SCFAs compared to overexpression of E. coli thioesterase tesB or native expression of endogenous thioesterases. To determine if altered thioesterase acyl-CoA substrate specificity caused the increase in product titers, six of the most promising enzymes were analyzed in vitro. Biochemical assays revealed that the most productive thioesterases rely on promiscuous activity but have greater specificity for product-associated acyl-CoAs than for precursor acyl-CoAs. In this study, we introduce novel thioesterases with improved specificity for saturated, branched, and unsaturated short-chain acyl-CoAs, thereby expanding the diversity of potential fatty acid products while increasing titers of current products. The growing uncertainty associated with protein database annotations denotes this study as a model for isolating functional biochemical pathway enzymes in situations where experimental evidence of enzyme function is absent.  相似文献   

4.
Branched-chain fatty acids (BCFAs) are key precursors of branched-chain fuels, which have cold-flow properties superior to straight chain fuels. BCFA production in Gram-negative bacterial hosts is inherently challenging because it competes directly with essential and efficient straight-chain fatty acid (SCFA) biosynthesis. Previously, Escherichia coli strains engineered for BCFA production also co-produced a large percentage of SCFA, complicating efficient isolation of BCFA. Here, we identified a key bottleneck in BCFA production: incomplete lipoylation of 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases. We engineered two protein lipoylation pathways that not only restored 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase lipoylation, but also increased BCFA production dramatically. E. coli expressing an optimized lipoylation pathway produced 276 mg/L BCFA, comprising 85% of the total free fatty acids (FFAs). Furthermore, we fine-tuned BCFA branch positions, yielding strains specifically producing ante-iso or odd-chain iso BCFA as 77% of total FFA, separately. When coupled with an engineered branched-chain amino acid pathway to enrich the branched-chain α-ketoacid pool, BCFA can be produced from glucose at 181 mg/L and 72% of total FFA. While E. coli can metabolize BCFAs, we demonstrated that they are not incorporated into the cell membrane, allowing our system to produce a high percentage of BCFA without affecting membrane fluidity. Overall, this work establishes a platform for high percentage BCFA production, providing the basis for efficient and specific production of a variety of branched-chain hydrocarbons in engineered bacterial hosts.  相似文献   

5.
A putative fatty acyl-acyl carrier protein (acyl-ACP) thioesterase (thioesterase) full-length cDNA sequence named as ClFATB1 was obtained from the seed cDNA library of Cinnamomum longepaniculatum by the SMART-RACE method. The novel gene encodes a protein of 382 amino acid residues with close homology to fatty acid thioesterase type B (FATB) enzymes of other plants, with two essential residues (His285 and Cys320) for thioesterase catalytic activity. The gene was transcribed in all tissues of C. longepaniculatum, the highest being in seeds. Recombinant ClFATB1 in Escherichia coli had higher specific activities against saturated 16:0- and 18:0-ACPs than on unsaturated 18:1-ACP. Overexpression of ClFATB1 in transgenic tobaccos upregulated thioesterase activities of crude proteins against 16:0-ACP and 18:0-ACP by 20.3 and 5.7%, respectively, and resulted in an increase in the contents of palmitic and stearic acids by 15.4 and 10.5%, respectively. However, ectopic expression of this gene decreased the substrate specificities of crude proteins to unsaturated 18:1-ACP by 12.7% in transgenic tobacco and lowered the contents of oleic, linoleic, and linolenic acids in transgenic leaves. So ClFATB1 would potentially upregulate the synthesis of saturated fatty acids and downregulate unsaturated ones in the fatty acid synthesis pathway of plants.  相似文献   

6.
Microbial biosynthesis of fatty acid-like chemicals from renewable carbon sources has attracted significant attention in recent years. Free fatty acids can be used as precursors for the production of fuels or chemicals. Free fatty acids can be produced by introducing an acyl–acyl carrier protein thioesterase gene into Escherichia coli. The presence of the acyl-ACP thioesterase will break the fatty acid elongation cycle and release free fatty acid. Depending on their sequence similarity and substrate specificity, class FatA thioesterase is active on unsaturated acyl-ACPs and class FatB prefers saturated acyl group. Different acyl-ACP thioesterases have different degrees of chain length specificity. Although some of these enzymes have been characterized from a number of sources, information on their ability to produce free fatty acid in microbial cells has not been extensively examined until recently. In this study, we examined the effect of the overexpression of acyl-ACP thioesterase genes from Diploknema butyracea, Gossypium hirsutum, Ricinus communis and Jatropha curcas on free fatty acid production. In particular, we are interested in studying the effect of different acyl-ACP thioesterase on the quantities and compositions of free fatty acid produced by an E. coli strain ML103 carrying these constructs. It is shown that the accumulation of free fatty acid depends on the acyl-ACP thioesterase used. The strain carrying the acyl-ACP thioesterase gene from D. butyracea produced approximately 0.2 g/L of free fatty acid while the strains carrying the acyl-ACP thioesterase genes from R. communis and J. curcas produced the most free fatty acid at a high level of more than 2.0 g/L at 48 h. These two strains accumulated three major straight chain free fatty acids, C14, C16:1 and C16 at levels about 40%, 35% and 20%, respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Production of biofuels derived from microbial fatty acids has attracted great attention in recent years owing to their potential to replace petroleum-derived fuels. To be cost competitive with current petroleum fuel, flux toward the direct precursor fatty acids needs to be enhanced to approach high yields. Herein, fatty acyl-CoA metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was engineered to accumulate more free fatty acids (FFA). For this purpose, firstly, haploid S. cerevisiae double deletion strain △faa1△faa4 was constructed, in which the genes FAA1 and FAA4 encoding two acyl-CoA synthetases were deleted. Then the truncated version of acyl-CoA thioesterase ACOT5 (Acot5s) encoding Mus musculus peroxisomal acyl-CoA thioesterase 5 was expressed in the cytoplasm of the strain △faa1△faa4. The resulting strain △faa1△faa4 [Acot5s] accumulated more extracellular FFA with higher unsaturated fatty acid (UFA) ratio as compared to the wild-type strain and double deletion strain △faa1△faa4. The extracellular total fatty acids (TFA) in the strain △faa1△faa4 [Acot5s] increased to 6.43-fold as compared to the wild-type strain during the stationary phase. UFA accounted for 42 % of TFA in the strain △faa1△faa4 [Acot5s], while no UFA was detected in the wild-type strain. In addition, the expression of Acot5s in △faa1△faa4 restored the growth, which indicates that FFA may not be the reason for growth inhibition in the strain △faa1△faa4. RT-PCR results demonstrated that the de-repression of fatty acid synthesis genes led to the increase of extracellular fatty acids. The study presented here showed that through control of the acyl-CoA metabolism by deleting acyl-CoA synthetase and expressing thioesterase, more FFA could be produced in S. cerevisiae, demonstrating great potential for exploitation in the platform of microbial fatty acid-derived biofuels.  相似文献   

8.
The present study evaluates the unsaturated fatty acid requirement in Escherichia coli. A derivative of a double mutant defective both in unsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis and in fatty acid degradation has been selected which grows equally well on anteisopentadecanoate (12-Me-14:0) or cis-Δ9-octadecenoate (cis-δ9-18:1). When this strain is grown for many generations on 12-Me-14:0, there is extensive incorporation of this analogue into the membrane phospholipid and essentially no detectable unsaturated fatty acids residues in any lipid-containing structures of the cell envelope. Secondly, as the maximal growth temperature of E. coli is approached, the minimum content of unsaturated fatty acid required by this strain for growth decreases to a few percent and is associated with the appearance of substantial amounts of 12:0 (8%) and 14:0 (50%) in the phospholipid. These experiments demonstrate that the cis unsaturated fatty acids of E. coli phospholipids can be replaced by residues which possess no special electronic configuration. Hence, the unsaturated fatty acids do not participate in specific interactions with other membrane components but serve a general role of controlling the packing of paraffin chains in the membrane bilayer.  相似文献   

9.
Medium-chain fatty acids (C6–C10) have attracted much attention recently for their unique properties compared to their long-chain counterparts, including low melting points and relatively higher carbon conversion yield. Thioesterase enzymes, which can catalyze the hydrolysis of acyl-ACP (acyl carrier protein) to release free fatty acids (FAs), regulate both overall FA yields and acyl chain length distributions in bacterial and yeast fermentation cultures. These enzymes typically prefer longer chain substrates. Herein, seeking to increase bacterial production of MCFAs, we conducted structure-guided mutational screening of multiple residues in the substrate-binding pocket of the E. coli thioesterase enzyme ‘TesA. Confirming our hypothesis that enhancing substrate selectivity for medium-chain acyl substrates would promote overall MCFA production, we found that replacement of residues lining the bottom of the pocket with more hydrophobic residues strongly promoted the C8 substrate selectivity of ‘TesA. Specifically, two rounds of saturation mutagenesis led to the identification of the ‘TesARD−2 variant that exhibited a 133-fold increase in selectivity for the C8-ACP substrate as compared to C16-ACP substrate. Moreover, the recombinant expression of this variant in an E. coli strain with a blocked β-oxidation pathway led to a 1030% increase in the in vivo octanoic acid (C8) production titer. When this strain was fermented in a 5-L fed-batch bioreactor, it produced 2.7 g/L of free C8 (45%, molar fraction) and 7.9 g/L of total free FAs, which is the highest-to-date free C8 titer to date reported using the E. coli type II fatty acid synthetic pathway. Thus, reshaping the substrate binding pocket of a bacterial thioesterase enzyme by manipulating the hydrophobicity of multiple residues altered the substrate selectivity and therefore fatty acid product distributions in cells. Our study demonstrates the relevance of this strategy for increasing titers of industrially attractive MCFAs as fermentation products.  相似文献   

10.
Thioesterases (TEs) play an essential role in the metabolism of fatty acids (FAs). To explore the role of TEs in mediating intracellular lipid metabolism in the oleaginous fungus Mortierella alpina, the acyl-CoA thioesterase ACOT8I was overexpressed. The contents of total fatty acids (TFAs) were the same in the recombinant strains as in the wild-type M. alpina, whilst the production of free fatty acids (FFAs) was enhanced from about 0.9% (wild-type) to 2.8% (recombinant), a roughly threefold increase. Linoleic acid content in FFA form constituted about 9% of the TFAs in the FFA fraction in the recombinant strains but only about 1.3% in the wild-type M. alpina. The gamma-linolenic acid and arachidonic acid contents in FFA form accounted for about 4 and 25%, respectively, of the TFAs in the FFA fraction in the recombinant strains, whilst neither of them in FFA form were detected in the wild-type M. alpina. Overexpression of the TE ACOT8I in the oleaginous fungus M. alpina reinforced the flux from acyl-CoAs to FFAs, improved the production of FFAs and tailored the FA profiles of the lipid species.  相似文献   

11.
Demand for sustainable materials motivates the development of microorganisms capable of synthesizing products from renewable substrates. A challenge to commercial production of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA), microbially derived polyesters, is engineering metabolic pathways to produce a polymer with the desired monomer composition from an unrelated and renewable source. Here, we demonstrate a metabolic pathway for converting glucose into medium-chain-length (mcl)-PHA composed primarily of 3-hydroxydodecanoate monomers. This pathway combines fatty acid biosynthesis, an acyl-ACP thioesterase to generate desired C12 and C14 fatty acids, β-oxidation for conversion of fatty acids to (R)-3-hydroxyacyl-CoAs, and a PHA polymerase. A key finding is that Escherichia coli expresses multiple copies of enzymes involved in β-oxidation under aerobic conditions. To produce polyhydroxydodecanoate, an acyl-ACP thioesterase (BTE), an enoyl-CoA hydratase (phaJ3), and mcl-PHA polymerase (phaC2) were overexpressed in E. coli ΔfadRABIJ. Yields were improved through expression of an acyl-CoA synthetase resulting in production over 15% CDW – the highest reported production of mcl-PHA of a defined composition from an unrelated carbon source.  相似文献   

12.
In this work, modifications of cell membrane fluidity, fatty acid composition and fatty acid biosynthesis-associated genes of Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 (E. coli) and Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6538 (S. aureus), during growth in the presence of naringenin (NAR), one of the natural antibacterial components in citrus plants, was investigated. Compared to E. coli, the growth of S. aureus was significantly inhibited by NAR in low concentrations. Combination of gas chromatography–mass spectrometry with fluorescence polarization analysis revealed that E. coli and S. aureus cells increased membrane fluidity by altering the composition of membrane fatty acids after exposure to NAR. For example, E. coli cells produced more unsaturated fatty acids (from 18.5% to 43.3%) at the expense of both cyclopropane and saturated fatty acids after growth in the concentrations of NAR from 0 to 2.20 mM. For S. aureus grown with NAR at 0 to 1.47 mM, the relative proportions of anteiso-branched chain fatty acids increased from 37.2% to 54.4%, whereas iso-branched and straight chain fatty acids decreased from 30.0% and 33.1% to 21.6% and 23.7%, respectively. Real time q-PCR analysis showed that NAR at higher concentrations induced a significant down-regulation of fatty acid biosynthesis-associated genes in the bacteria, with the exception of an increased expression of fabA gene. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of NAR against these two bacteria was determined, and both of bacteria underwent morphological changes after exposure to 1.0 and 2.0 MIC.  相似文献   

13.
Fatty acids inhibited the ability of Escherichia coli membrane-envelope fragments to catalyze the oxidation of succinate and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced form (NADH) and also inhibited the response of the Clark oxygen electrode to nonenzymatic oxygen uptake. In all cases, unsaturated fatty acids were much more inhibitory than saturated fatty acids. Albumin afforded complete protection from inhibition in the nonenzymatic oxygen-uptake experiments but only partial protection for the respiratory activities of the membrane fragments. The succinoxidase activity was totally inhibited by bovine serum albumin at concentrations that inhibited succinate dehydrogenase only slightly and NADH oxidase not at all. The E. coli acellular preparation showed no dehydrogenase or oxidase activity for any of the fatty acids under a variety of conditions. These conditions included variations of pH, concentration of fatty acids, and the presence or absence of albumin, CoA, ATP, NAD, cysteine, succinate, and carnitine. It thus appears that E. coli grown in the absence of fatty acid can not use fatty acids as an energy source.  相似文献   

14.
Biodiesel is produced worldwide as an alternative energy fuel and substitute for petroleum. Biodiesel is often obtained from vegetable oil, but production of biodiesel from plants requires additional land for growing crops and can affect the global food supply. Consequently, it is necessary to develop appropriate microorganisms for the development of an alternative biodiesel feedstock. Escherichia coli is suitable for the production of biodiesel feedstocks since it can synthesize fatty acids for lipid production, grows well, and is amenable to genetic engineering. Recombinant E. coli was designed and constructed for the production of biodiesel with improved unsaturated fatty acid contents via regulation of the FAS pathway consisting of initiation, elongation, and termination steps. Here, we investigated the effects of fabA, fabB, and fabF gene expression on the production of unsaturated fatty acids and observed that the concentration of cis-vaccenic acid, a major component of unsaturated fatty acids, increased 1.77-fold compared to that of the control strain. We also introduced the genes which synthesize malonyl-ACP used during initiation step of fatty acid synthesis and the genes which produce free fatty acids during termination step to study the effect of combination of genes in elongation step and other steps. The total fatty acid content of this strain increased by 35.7% compared to that of the control strain. The amounts of unsaturated fatty acids and cis-vaccenic acid increased by 3.27 and 3.37-fold, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
Growth of Escherichia coli in the presence of ethanol results in the synthesis of lipids containing elevated proportions of unsaturated fatty acids. Previous in vivo experiments indicated that the ethanol-induced changes in fatty acid composition result from a preferential inhibition of saturated fatty acid synthesis. In this study, the inhibition of saturated fatty acid synthesis by ethanol was confirmed in vitro. This inhibition was not membrane mediated and resulted from a direct action of ethanol on the soluble enzymes of fatty acid synthesis. The addition of ethanol resulted in a decrease in chain length of both saturated and unsaturated acyl products in vitro. Experiments with enzymes prepared from several fatty acid synthesis mutants of E. coli indicate that β-hydroxydecanoyl-acyl carrier protein dehydrase is not the site of the ethanol inhibition of saturated fatty acid synthesis. The two condensing enzymes are the probable sites for inhibition by ethanol.  相似文献   

16.
Increasing demands for petroleum have stimulated sustainable ways to produce chemicals and biofuels. Specifically, fatty acids of varying chain lengths (C6–C16) naturally synthesized in many organisms are promising starting points for the catalytic production of industrial chemicals and diesel-like biofuels. However, bio-production of fatty acids from plants and other microbial production hosts relies heavily on manipulating tightly regulated fatty acid biosynthetic pathways. In addition, precursors for fatty acids are used along other central metabolic pathways for the production of amino acids and biomass, which further complicates the engineering of microbial hosts for higher yields. Here, we demonstrate an iterative metabolic engineering effort that integrates computationally driven predictions and metabolic flux analysis techniques to meet this challenge. The OptForce procedure was used for suggesting and prioritizing genetic manipulations that overproduce fatty acids of different chain lengths from C6 to C16 starting with wild-type E. coli. We identified some common but mostly chain-specific genetic interventions alluding to the possibility of fine-tuning overproduction for specific fatty acid chain lengths. In accordance with the OptForce prioritization of interventions, fabZ and acyl-ACP thioesterase were upregulated and fadD was deleted to arrive at a strain that produces 1.70 g/L and 0.14 g fatty acid/g glucose (~39% maximum theoretical yield) of C14–16 fatty acids in minimal M9 medium. These results highlight the benefit of using computational strain design and flux analysis tools in the design of recombinant strains of E. coli to produce free fatty acids.  相似文献   

17.
The goal of this research was to develop recombinant Escherichia coli to improve fatty acid synthesis (FAS). Genes encoding acetyl-CoA carboxylase (accA, accB, accC), malonyl-CoA-[acyl-carrier-protein] transacylase (fabD), and acyl-acyl carrier protein thioesterase (EC 3.1.2.14 gene), which are all enzymes that catalyze key steps in the synthesis of fatty acids, were cloned and over-expressed in E. coli MG1655. The acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) enzyme catalyzes the addition of CO2 to acetyl-CoA to generate malonyl-CoA. The enzyme encoded by the fabD gene converts malonyl-CoA to malonyl-[acp], and the EC 3.1.2.14 gene converts fatty acyl-ACP chains to long chain fatty acids. All the genes except for the EC 3.1.2.14 gene were homologous to E. coli genes and were used to improve the enzymatic activities to over-express components of the FAS pathway through metabolic engineering. All recombinant E. coli MG1655 strains containing various gene combinations were developed using the pTrc99A expression vector. To observe changes in metabolism, the in vitro metabolites and fatty acids produced by the recombinants were analyzed. The fatty acids (C16) from recombinant strains were produced 1.23-2.41 times higher than that from the wild type.  相似文献   

18.

Background

Thioesterases remove the fatty acyl moiety from the fatty acyl-acyl carrier proteins (ACPs), releasing them as free fatty acids (FFAs), which can be further used to produce a variety of fatty acid-based biofuels, such as biodiesel, fatty alcohols and alkanes. Thioesterases play a key role in the regulation of the fatty acid synthesis in Escherichia coli. Therefore, exploring more promising thioesterases will contribute to the development of industrial microbial lipids production.

Results

We cloned and expressed a cytosolic Acinetobacter baylyi thioesterase (‘AcTesA) in E. coli by deleting its leader sequence. Protein sequence alignment, structure modeling and site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that Ser10, Gly48, Asn77, Asp158 and His161 residues composed the active centre of ‘AcTesA. The engineered strain that overexpressed ‘AcTesA achieved a FFAs titer of up to 501.2 mg/L in shake flask, in contrast to only 20.5 mg/L obtained in wild-type E. coli, demonstrating that the expression of ‘AcTesA indeed boosted the synthesis of FFAs. The ‘AcTesA exhibited a substrate preference towards the C8-C16 acyl groups, with C14:0, C16:1, C12:0 and C8:0 FFAs being the top four components. Optimization of expression level of ‘AcTesA made the FFAs production increase to 551.3 mg/L. The FFAs production further increased to 716.1 mg/L by optimization of the culture medium. Fed-batch fermentation was also carried out to evaluate the FFAs production in a scaleable process. Finally, 3.6 g/L FFAs were accumulated within 48 h, and a maximal FFAs yield of 6.1% was achieved in 12–16 h post induction.

Conclusions

For the first time, an A. baylyi thioesterase was cloned and solubly expressed in the cytosol of E. coli. This leaderless thioesterase (‘AcTesA) was found to be capable of enhancing the FFAs production of E. coli. Without detailed optimization of the strain and fermentation, the finally achieved 3.6 g/L FFAs is encouraging. In addition, ‘AcTesA exhibited different substrate specificity from other thioesterases previously reported, and can be used to supply the fatty acid-based biofuels with high quality of FFAs. Altogether, this study provides a promising thioesterase for FFAs production, and is of great importance in enriching the library of useful thioesterases.
  相似文献   

19.
The effects of stress shocks on the freeze-drying viability, malolactic activity and membrane fatty acid composition of the Oenococcus oeni SD-2a cells were studied. O. oeni SD-2a cells after 2 h of stress exposure exhibited better freeze-drying viability and malolactic fermentation ability. A decrease in unsaturated fatty acids/saturated fatty acids (UFA/SFA) ratio and in the C18:1 relative concentration, and an increase in cyclopropane fatty acids (CFA) content mainly due to the increase in C19cyc11 relative concentration were observed in all stress shocked cells. There was a significant negative correlation between C19cyc11 and C18:lcis11, C16:0 in all stress shocks. The freeze-drying viability exhibited a significant positive correlation with the levels of C19cyc11 in cold and acid shocks. The only significant positive correlation between the ability of O. oeni SD-2a to conduct malic acid degradation and membrane composition existed with C14:0 in ethanol shocks. In general, freeze-drying viabilities were maximum for cells with low UFA/SFA ratio and high CFA levels, and, consequently, with low membrane fluidity. Moreover, CFA formation played a major role in protecting stress shocked cells from lyophilization. However, changes observed in membrane fatty acid composition are not enough to explain the greater freeze-drying viability of cells shocked at 8% ethanol. Thus, other mechanisms could be responsible for this increase in the bacterial resistance to lyophilization.  相似文献   

20.
Erratum     
Escherichia coli cells (unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph) have been adapted to grow on branched-chain fatty acids. Membrane vesicles were isolated from cells grown on a mixture of branched-chain fatty acids isolated from the lipids of Bacillus subtilis (E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes) and on a pure synthetic anti-isononadecanoic acid (E. coli (aC19) membranes).We have shown, using wide-angle X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry, that the ordered state of the lipids is perturbed in the case of E. coli (aC19) membranes. The perturbation leads to the presence of a large wide-angle X-ray diffraction at 4.25–4.3 Å, as opposed to the presence of a sharp 4.2 Å reflection in unperturbed systems.We have shown, using freeze-fracture electron microscopy, that a protein segregation exists in the case of E. coli (aC19) membranes (at low temperature the integral membrane proteins aggregate in the membrane domains containing the disordered lipids); we do not observe such segregation in the case of E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes. We conclude that in cases where the branching of the fatty acids introduces a perturbation of the lipid order, the integral membrane proteins can still be accommodated in membrane domains containing the ‘perturbed’ ordered lipids.Finally, we have determined the rate of β-galactoside transport in E. coli (aC19) and E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes as a function of temperature. We have shown that, in both cases, the Arrhenius representations display an increased slope in the region of the disorder-to-order transition. We conclude that such an increased slope may have different origins. In the case of E. coli (aC19) membranes, it is the result of the aggregation of the β-galactoside carriers together with other integral membrane proteins which may lead to the inactivation of the carriers; in the case of E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes, it is the result of the partial immobilisation of the carriers embedded in a lipid environment, of which the fluidity, despite the perturbation of its lipid order, is still much less than that associated with lipids in a totally disordered state.  相似文献   

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