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1.
Corynebacterium glutamicum strains CRA1 and CRX2 are able to grow on l-arabinose and d-xylose, respectively, as sole carbon sources. Nevertheless, they exhibit the major shortcoming that their sugar consumption appreciably declines at lower concentrations of these substrates. To address this, the C. glutamicum ATCC31831 l-arabinose transporter gene, araE, was independently integrated into both strains. Unlike its parental strain, resultant CRA1-araE was able to aerobically grow at low (3.6 g·l−1) l-arabinose concentrations. Interestingly, strain CRX2-araE grew 2.9-fold faster than parental CRX2 at low (3.6 g·l−1) d-xylose concentrations. The corresponding substrate consumption rates of CRA1-araE and CRX2-araE under oxygen-deprived conditions were 2.8- and 2.7-fold, respectively, higher than those of their respective parental strains. Moreover, CRA1-araE and CRX2-araE utilized their respective substrates simultaneously with d-glucose under both aerobic and oxygen-deprived conditions. Based on these observations, a platform strain, ACX-araE, for C. glutamicum-based mixed sugar utilization was designed. It harbored araBAD for l-arabinose metabolism, xylAB for d-xylose metabolism, d-cellobiose permease-encoding bglF 317A , β-glucosidase-encoding bglA and araE in its chromosomal DNA. In mineral medium containing a sugar mixture of d-glucose, d-xylose, l-arabinose, and d-cellobiose under oxygen-deprived conditions, strain ACX-araE simultaneously and completely consumed all sugars.  相似文献   

2.
NADPH-dependent aldose reductase activity induced by d-xylose or l-arabinose was detected in cell-free extracts of Candida guilliermondii, but only negligible activities were observed if d-glucose served as carbon source. The induction of aldose reductase activity on mixed sugars was investigated under resting cell conditions. d-Glucose repressed enzyme induction by d-xylose or l-arabinose to varying degrees, and l-arabinose inhibited enzyme induction by d-xylose. During incubation in a mixture of d-xylose-d-glucose, glucose consumption by cells was fast and simultaneous with d-xylose utilization. l-arabinose consumption was poor when it was present as the only sugar and in a mixture with d-glucose; this pentose depletion occurred only when all hexose was consumed. When d-xylose and l-arabinose were present in a mixture, the consumption of both pentoses was reduced by the presence of the second sugar, although both sugars were consumed simultaneously by cells. The results show that induction of aldose reductase activity and d-xylose utilization by cells of Candida guilliermondii are under control of glucose repression.  相似文献   

3.
Bacillus coagulans has been of great commercial interest over the past decade owing to its strong ability of producing optical pure l-lactic acid from both hexose and pentose sugars including l-arabinose with high yield, titer and productivity under thermophilic conditions. The l-arabinose isomerase (L-AI) from Bacillus coagulans was heterologously over-expressed in Escherichia coli. The open reading frame of the L-AI has 1,422 nucleotides encoding a protein with 474 amino acid residues. The recombinant L-AI was purified to homogeneity by one-step His-tag affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the enzyme was estimated to be 56 kDa by SDS-PAGE. The enzyme was most active at 70°C and pH 7.0. The metal ion Mn2+ was shown to be the best activator for enzymatic activity and thermostability. The enzyme showed higher activity at acidic pH than at alkaline pH. The kinetic studies showed that the K m, V max and k cat/K m for the conversion of l-arabinose were 106 mM, 84 U/mg and 34.5 mM−1min−1, respectively. The equilibrium ratio of l-arabinose to l-ribulose was 78:22 under optimal conditions. l-ribulose (97 g/L) was obtained from 500 g/l of l-arabinose catalyzed by the enzyme (8.3 U/mL) under the optimal conditions within 1.5 h, giving at a substrate conversion of 19.4% and a production rate of 65 g L−1 h−1.  相似文献   

4.
To develop a new enzymatic xylose-to-xylitol conversion, deeper knowledge on the regulation of xylose reductase (XR) is needed. To this purpose, a new strain of Debaryomyces hansenii (UFV-170), which proved a promising xylitol producer, was cultivated in semi-synthetic media containing different carbon sources, specifically three aldo-hexoses (d-glucose, d-galactose and d-mannose), a keto-hexose (d-fructose), a keto-pentose (d-xylose), three aldo-pentoses (d-arabinose, l-arabinose and d-ribose), three disaccharides (maltose, lactose and sucrose) and a pentitol (xylitol). The best substrate was lactose on which cell concentration reached about 20 g l−1 dry weight (DW), while the highest specific growth rates (0.58–0.61 h−1) were detected on lactose, d-mannose, d-glucose and d-galactose. The highest specific activity of XR (0.24 U mg−1) was obtained in raw extracts of cells grown on d-xylose and harvested in the stationary growth phase. When grown on cotton husk hemicellulose hydrolyzates, cells exhibited XR activities five to seven times higher than on semi-synthetic media.  相似文献   

5.
In the fed-batch culture of glycerol using a metabolically engineered strain of Escherichia coli, supplementation with glucose as an auxiliary carbon source increased lycopene production due to a significant increase in cell mass, despite a reduction in specific lycopene content. l-Arabinose supplementation increased lycopene production due to increases in cell mass and specific lycopene content. Supplementation with both glucose and l-arabinose increased lycopene production significantly due to the synergistic effect of the two sugars. Cell growth by the consumption of carbon sources was related to endogenous metabolism in the host E. coli. Supplementation with l-arabinose stimulated only the mevalonate pathway for lycopene biosynthesis and supplementation with both glucose and l-arabinose stimulated synergistically only the mevalonate pathway. In the fed-batch culture of glycerol with 10 g l−1 glucose and 7.5 g l−1 l-arabinose, the cell mass, lycopene concentration, specific lycopene content, and lycopene productivity after 34 h were 42 g l−1, 1,350 mg l−1, 32 mg g cells−1, and 40 mg l−1 h−1, respectively. These values were 3.9-, 7.1-, 1.9-, and 11.7-fold higher than those without the auxiliary carbon sources, respectively. This is the highest reported concentration and productivity of lycopene.  相似文献   

6.
l-Arabinose is the second most abundant pentose beside d-xylose and is found in the plant polysaccharides, hemicellulose and pectin. The need to find renewable carbon and energy sources has accelerated research to investigate the potential of l-arabinose for the development and production of biofuels and other bioproducts. Fungi produce a number of extracellular arabinanases, including α-l-arabinofuranosidases and endo-arabinanases, to specifically release l-arabinose from the plant polymers. Following uptake of l-arabinose, its intracellular catabolism follows a four-step alternating reduction and oxidation path, which is concluded by a phosphorylation, resulting in d-xylulose 5-phosphate, an intermediate of the pentose phosphate pathway. The genes and encoding enzymes l-arabinose reductase, l-arabinitol dehydrogenase, l-xylulose reductase, xylitol dehydrogenase, and xylulokinase of this pathway were mainly characterized in the two biotechnological important fungi Aspergillus niger and Trichoderma reesei. Analysis of the components of the l-arabinose pathway revealed a number of specific adaptations in the enzymatic and regulatory machinery towards the utilization of l-arabinose. Further genetic and biochemical analysis provided evidence that l-arabinose and the interconnected d-xylose pathway are also involved in the oxidoreductive degradation of the hexose d-galactose.  相似文献   

7.
Xylose reductase (XR) is a key enzyme in biological xylitol production, and most XRs have broad substrate specificities. During xylitol production from biomass hydrolysate, non-specific XRs can reduce l-arabinose, which is the second-most abundant hemicellulosic sugar, to the undesirable byproduct arabitol, which interferes with xylitol crystallization in downstream processing. To minimize the flux from l-arabinose to arabitol, the l-arabinose-preferring, endogenous XR was replaced by a d-xylose-preferring heterologous XR in Candida tropicalis. Then, Bacillus licheniformis araA and Escherichia coli araB and araD were codon-optimized and expressed functionally in C. tropicalis for the efficient assimilation of l-arabinose. During xylitol fermentation, the control strains BSXDH-3 and KNV converted 9.9 g l-arabinose l−1 into 9.5 and 8.3 g arabitol l−1, respectively, whereas the recombinant strain JY consumed 10.5 g l-arabinose l−1 for cell growth without forming arabitol. Moreover, JY produced xylitol with 42 and 16% higher productivity than BSXDH-3 and KNV, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
l-Arabinose utilization by the yeasts Candida arabinofermentans PYCC 5603T and Pichia guilliermondii PYCC 3012 was investigated in aerobic batch cultures and compared, under similar conditions, to d-glucose and d-xylose metabolism. At high aeration levels, only biomass was formed from all the three sugars. When oxygen became limited, ethanol was produced from d-glucose, demonstrating a fermentative pathway in these yeasts. However, pentoses were essentially respired and, under oxygen limitation, the respective polyols accumulated—arabitol from l-arabinose and xylitol from d-xylose. Different l-arabinose concentrations and oxygen conditions were tested to better understand l-arabinose metabolism. P. guilliermondii PYCC 3012 excreted considerably more arabitol from l-arabinose (and also xylitol from d-xylose) than C. arabinofermentans PYCC 5603T. In contrast to the latter, P. guilliermondii PYCC 3012 did not produce any traces of ethanol in complex l-arabinose (80 g/l) medium under oxygen-limited conditions. Neither sustained growth nor active metabolism was observed under anaerobiosis. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the oxygen dependence of metabolite and product formation in l-arabinose-assimilating yeasts.  相似文献   

9.
Continuous production of ethanol from alkaline peroxide pretreated and enzymatically saccharified wheat straw hydrolysate by ethanologenic recombinant Escherichia coli strain FBR5 was investigated under various conditions at controlled pH 6.5 and 35°C. The strain FBR5 was chosen because of its ability to ferment both hexose and pentose sugars under semi-anaerobic conditions without using antibiotics. The average ethanol produced from the available sugars (21.9–47.8 g/L) ranged from 8.8 to 17.3 g/L (0.28–0.45 g/g available sugars, 0.31–0.48 g/g sugar consumed) with ethanol productivity of 0.27–0.78 g l−1 h−1 in a set of 14 continuous culture (CC) runs (16–105 days). During these CC runs, no loss of ethanol productivity was observed. This is the first report on the continuous production of ethanol by the recombinant bacterium from a lignocellulosic hydrolysate.  相似文献   

10.
Recombinant Escherichia coli harboring the l-arabinose isomerase (BLAI) from Bacillus licheniformis was used as a biocatalyst to produce l-ribulose in the presence of borate. Effects of substrate concentration, the borate to l-arabinose ratio, pH, and temperature on the conversion of l-arabinose to l-ribulose were investigated. l-Ribulose production was efficient when pH was higher than 9 and temperature was higher than 50 °C. Borate addition to the reaction mixture was essential for high conversion of l-arabinose to l-ribulose as it resulted in an equilibrium shift in favor of the product. Under the optimal conditions determined by response surface methodology, the E. coli harboring BLAI produced 375 g l−1 L-ribulose from 500 g l−1 l-arabinose at a reaction time of 60 min, corresponding to a conversion yield of 75% and productivity of 375 g l−1 h−1. When the resting recombinant E. coli cells were recycled, 85% of the yield was obtained even after seven cycles of reuse. The productivity and final concentration of l-ribulose obtained in the present study were the highest yet reported.  相似文献   

11.
Cost-effective and efficient ethanol production from lignocellulosic materials requires the fermentation of all sugars recovered from such materials including glucose, xylose, mannose, galactose, and l-arabinose. Wild-type strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae used in industrial ethanol production cannot ferment d-xylose and l-arabinose. Our genetically engineered recombinant S. cerevisiae yeast 424A(LNH-ST) has been made able to efficiently ferment xylose to ethanol, which was achieved by integrating multiple copies of three xylose-metabolizing genes. This study reports the efficient anaerobic fermentation of l-arabinose by the derivative of 424A(LNH-ST). The new strain was constructed by over-expression of two additional genes from fungi l-arabinose utilization pathways. The resulting new 424A(LNH-ST) strain exhibited production of ethanol from l-arabinose, and the yield was more than 40%. An efficient ethanol production, about 72.5% yield from five-sugar mixtures containing glucose, galactose, mannose, xylose, and arabinose was also achieved. This co-fermentation of five-sugar mixture is important and crucial for application in industrial economical ethanol production using lignocellulosic biomass as the feedstock.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, the effects of citrate addition on d-ribose production were investigated in batch culture of a transketolase-deficient strain, Bacillus subtilis EC2, in shake flasks and bioreactors. Batch cultures in shake flasks and a 5-l reactor indicated that supplementation with 0.2–0.5 g l−1 of citrate enhanced d-ribose production. When B. subtilis EC2 was cultivated in a 15-l reactor in a complex medium, the d-ribose concentration was 70.9 g l−1 with a ribose yield of 0.497 mol mol−1. When this strain was grown in the same medium supplemented with 0.3 g l−1 of citrate, 83.4 g l−1 of d-ribose were obtained, and the ribose yield was increased to 0.587 mol mol−1. Addition of citrate reduced the activities of pyruvate kinase and phosphofructokinase, while it increased those of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. Metabolic flux distribution in the stationary phase indicated that citrate addition resulted in increased fluxes in the pentose phosphate pathway and TCA cycle, and decreased fluxes in the glycolysis and acetate pathways.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Cell extracts ofCandida guilliermondii grown ind-xylose,l-arabinose,d-galactose,d-glucose,d-mannose and glycerol as sole carbon sources possessed NADPH-dependent aldose reductase activity, but no NADH-dependent activity was detected.d-xylose andl-arabinose were the best inducers of aldose reductase activity. The highest enzyme activity ind-xylose orl-arabinose-grown cells was observed first withl-arabinose followed byd-xylose as substrates of the enzymatic reaction. However, only low activity was found ind-glucose,d-mannose andd-galactose-grown cells, indicating that these carbon sources cause catabolite repression. Enzyme activities induced ind-xylose-grown cells were twice as high as those obtained from the cells under resting conditions. Furthermore, the level of induction of aldose reductase activity depended on the initial concentration ofd-xylose. The present study shows that aldose reductase activity may be efficiently induced by pentose sugars of hemicellulosic hydrolysates and weakly by hemicellulosic hexoses.  相似文献   

14.
A putative N-acyl-d-glucosamine 2-epimerase from Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant enzyme was identified as a cellobiose 2-epimerase by the analysis of the activity for substrates, acid-hydrolyzed products, and amino acid sequence. The cellobiose 2-epimerase was purified with a specific activity of 35 nmol min–1 mg–1 for d-glucose with a 47-kDa monomer. The epimerization activity for d-glucose was maximal at pH 7.5 and 75°C. The half-lives of the enzyme at 60°C, 65°C, 70°C, 75°C, and 80°C were 142, 71, 35, 18, and 4.6 h, respectively. The enzyme catalyzed the epimerization reactions of the aldoses harboring hydroxyl groups oriented in the right-hand configuration at the C2 position and the left-hand configuration at the C3 position, such as d-glucose, d-xylose, l-altrose, l-idose, and l-arabinose, to their C2 epimers, such as d-mannose, d-lyxose, l-allose, l-gulose, and l-ribose, respectively. The enzyme catalyzed also the isomerization reactions. The enzyme exhibited the highest activity for mannose among monosaccharides. Thus, mannose at 75 g l–1 and fructose at 47.5 g l–1 were produced from 500 g l–1 glucose at pH 7.5 and 75°C over 3 h by the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
A putative ribose-5-phosphate isomerase (RpiB) from Streptococcus pneumoniae was purified with a specific activity of 26.7 U mg−1 by Hi-Trap Q HP anion exchange and Sephacryl S-300 HR 16/60 gel filtration chromatographies. The native enzyme existed as a 96-kDa tetramer with activity maxima at pH 7.5 and 35°C. The RpiB exhibited isomerization activity with l-lyxose, l-talose, d-gulose, d-ribose, l-mannose, d-allose, l-xylulose, l-tagatose, d-sorbose, d-ribulose, l-fructose, and d-psicose and exhibited particularly high activity with l-form monosaccharides such as l-lyxose, l-xylulose, l-talose, and l-tagatose. With l-xylulose (500 g l−1) and l-talose (500 g l−1) substrates, the optimum concentrations of RpiB were 300 and 600 U ml−1, respectively. The enzyme converted 500 g l−1 l-xylulose to 350 g l−1 l-lyxose after 3 h, and yielded 450 g l−1 l-tagatose from 500 g l−1 l-talose after 5 h. These results suggest that RpiB from S. pneumoniae can be employed as a potential producer of l-form monosaccharides.  相似文献   

16.
Corynebacterium glutamicum R was metabolically engineered to broaden its sugar utilization range to d-xylose and d-cellobiose contained in lignocellulose hydrolysates. The resultant recombinants expressed Escherichia coli xylA and xylB genes, encoding d-xylose isomerase and xylulokinase, respectively, for d-xylose utilization and expressed C. glutamicum R bglF 317A and bglA genes, encoding phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS) β-glucoside-specific enzyme IIBCA component and phospho-β-glucosidase, respectively, for d-cellobiose utilization. The genes were fused to the non-essential genomic regions distributed around the C. glutamicum R chromosome and were under the control of their respective constitutive promoter trc and tac that permitted their expression even in the presence of d-glucose. The enzyme activities of resulting recombinants increased with the increase in the number of respective integrated genes. Maximal sugar utilization was realized with strain X5C1 harboring five xylA–xylB clusters and one bglF 317A bglA cluster. In both d-cellobiose and d-xylose utilization, the sugar consumption rates by genomic DNA-integrated strain were faster than those by plasmid-bearing strain, respectively. In mineral medium containing 40 g l−1 d-glucose, 20 g l−1 d-xylose, and 10 g l−1 d-cellobiose, strain X5C1 simultaneously and completely consumed these sugars within 12 h and produced predominantly lactic and succinic acids under growth-arrested conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The fermentation by Candida shehatae and Pichia stipitis of xylitol and the various sugars which are liberated upon hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass was investigated. Both yeasts produced ethanol from d-glucose, d-mannose, d-galactose and d-xylose. Only P. stipitis fermented d-cellobiose, producing 6.5 g·l-1 ethanol from 20 g·l-1 cellobiose within 48 h. No ethanol was produced from l-arabinose, l-rhamnose or xylitol. Diauxie was evident during the fermentation of a sugar mixture. Following the depletion of glucose, P. stipitis fermented galactose, mannose, xylose and cellobiose simultaneously with no noticeable preceding lag period. A similar fermentation pattern was observed with C. shehatae, except that it failed to utilize cellobiose even though it grew on cellobiose when supplied as the sole sugar. P. stipitis produced considerably more ethanol from the sugar mixture than C. shehatae, primarily due to its ability to ferment cellobiose. In general P. stipitis exhibited a higher volumetric rate and yield of ethanol production. This yeast fermented glucose 30–50% more rapidly than xylose, whereas the rates of ethanol production from these two sugars by C. shehatae were similar. P. stipitis had no absolute vitamin requirement for xylose fermentation, but biotin and thiamine enhanced the rate and yield of ethanol production significantly.Nomenclature max Maximum specific growth rate, h-1 - Q p Maximum volumetric rate of ethanol production, calculated from the slope of the ethanol vs. time curve, g·(l·h)-1 - q p Maximum specific rate of ethanol production, g·(g cells·h) - Y p/s Ethanol yield coefficient, g ethanol·(g substrate utilized)-1 - Y x/s Cell yield coefficient, g biomass·(g substrate utilized)-1 - E Efficiency of substrate utilization, g substrate consumed·(g initial substrate)-1·100  相似文献   

18.
 Lignocellulosic biomass, particularly corn fiber, represents a renewable resource that is available in sufficient quantities from the corn wet milling industry to serve as a low cost feedstock for production of fuel alcohol and valuable coproducts. Several enzymatic and chemical processes have potential for the conversion of cellulose and hemicellulose to fermentable sugars. The hydrolyzates are generally rich in pentoses (D-xylose and L-arabinose) and D-glucose. Yeasts produce a variety of polyalcohols from pentose and hexose sugars. Many of these sugar alcohols have food applications as low-calorie bulking agents. During the screening of 49 yeast strains capable of growing on L-arabinose, we observed that two strains were superior secretors of L-arabitol as a major extracellular product of L-arabinose. Candida entomaea NRRL Y-7785 and Pichia guilliermondii NRRL Y-2075 produced L-arabitol (0.70 g/g) from L-arabinose (50 g/l) at 34°C and pH 5.0 and 4.0, respectively. Both yeasts produced ethanol (0.32–0.33 g/g) from D-glucose (50 g/l) and only xylitol (0.43–0.51 g/g) from D-xylose (50 g/l). Both strains preferentially utilized D-glucose>D-xylose>L-arabinose from mixed substrate (D-glucose, D-xylose and L-arabinose, 1:1:1, 50 g/l, total) and produced ethanol (0.36–0.38 g/g D-glucose), xylitol (0.02–0.08 g/g D-xylose) and L-arabitol (0.70–0.81 g/g L-arabinose). The yeasts co-utilized D-xylose (6.2–6.5 g/l) and L-arabinose (4.9–5.0 g/l) from corn fiber acid hydrolyzate simultaneously and produced xylitol (0.10 g/g D-xylose) and L-arabitol (0.53–0.54 g/g L-arabinose). Received: 24 April 1995/Received revision: 9 August 1995/Accepted: 7 September 1995  相似文献   

19.
Summary Cells ofCandida shehatae repressed by growth in glucose- or D-xylose-medium produced a facilitated diffusion system that transported glucose (K s±2 mM,V max±2.3 mmoles g−1 h−1),d-xylose (K s±125 mM,V max±22.5 mmoles g−1 h−1) and D-mannose, but neither D-galactose norl-arabinose. Cells derepressed by starvation formed several sugar-proton symports. One proton symport accumulated 3-0-methylglucose about 400-fold and transported glucose (K s±0.12 mM,V max ± 3.2 mmoles g−1 h−1) andd-mannose, a second proton symport transportedd-xylose (K s± 1.0 mM,V max 1.4 mmoles g−1 h−1) andd-galactose, whilel-arabinose apparently used a third proton symport. The stoicheiometry was one proton for each molecule of glucose or D-xylose transported. Substrates of one sugar proton symport inhibited non-competitively the transport of substrates of the other symports. Starvation, while inducing the sugar-proton symports, silenced the facilitated diffusion system with respect to glucose transport but not with respect to the transport of D-xylose, facilitated diffusion functioning simultaneously with thed-xylose-proton symport.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Fed-batch cultivations of Pichia stipitis and strains of Candida shehatae with d-xylose or d-glucose were conducted at controlled low dissolved oxygen tension (DOT) levels. There were some marked differences between the strains. In general growth was inhibited at lower ethanol concentrations than fermentation, and ethanol levels of up to 47 g·l-1 were produced at 30°C. Ethanol production was mainly growth associated. The yeast strains formed small amounts of monocarboxylic acids and higher alcohols, which apparently did not enhance the ethanol toxicity. The maximum ethanol concentration obtained on d-xylose could not be increased by using a high cell density culture, nor by using d-glucose as substrate. The latter observation suggested that the low ethanol tolerance of these xylose-fermenting yeast strains was not a consequence of the metabolic pathway used during pentose fermentation. In contrast with the C. shehatae strains, it was apparent with P. stipitis CSIR-Y633 that when the ethanol concentration reached about 28 g·l-1, ethanol assimilation exceeded ethanol production, despite cultivation at a low DOT of 0.2% of air saturation. Discontinuing the aeration enabled ethanol accumulation to proceed, but with concomitant xylitol production and cessation of growth.  相似文献   

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