JOURNAL ARTICLE

Increased Ethanol Productivity in Xylose-Utilizing Saccharomyces cerevisiae via a Randomly Mutagenized Xylose Reductase

David RunquistBärbel Hahn‐HägerdalMaurizio Bettiga

Year: 2010 Journal:   Applied and Environmental Microbiology Vol: 76 (23)Pages: 7796-7802   Publisher: American Society for Microbiology

Abstract

ABSTRACT Baker's yeast ( Saccharomyces cerevisiae ) has been genetically engineered to ferment the pentose sugar xylose present in lignocellulose biomass. One of the reactions controlling the rate of xylose utilization is catalyzed by xylose reductase (XR). In particular, the cofactor specificity of XR is not optimized with respect to the downstream pathway, and the reaction rate is insufficient for high xylose utilization in S. cerevisiae. The current study describes a novel approach to improve XR for ethanol production in S. cerevisiae . The cofactor binding region of XR was mutated by error-prone PCR, and the resulting library was expressed in S. cerevisiae . The S. cerevisiae library expressing the mutant XR was selected in sequential anaerobic batch cultivation. At the end of the selection process, a strain (TMB 3420) harboring the XR mutations N272D and P275Q was enriched from the library. The V max of the mutated enzyme was increased by an order of magnitude compared to that of the native enzyme, and the NADH/NADPH utilization ratio was increased significantly. The ethanol productivity from xylose in TMB 3420 was increased ∼40 times compared to that of the parent strain (0.32 g/g [dry weight {DW}] × h versus 0.007 g/g [DW] × h), and the anaerobic growth rate was increased from ∼0 h −1 to 0.08 h −1 . The improved traits of TMB 3420 were readily transferred to the parent strain by reverse engineering of the mutated XR gene. Since integrative vectors were employed in the construction of the library, transfer of the improved phenotype does not require multicopy expression from episomal plasmids.

Keywords:
Xylose Saccharomyces cerevisiae Biochemistry Yeast Cofactor Pentose phosphate pathway Xylose metabolism Mutant Reductase Chemistry Ethanol fuel Biology Fermentation Enzyme Gene Glycolysis

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Citation History

Topics

Biofuel production and bioconversion
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Microbial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Fungal and yeast genetics research
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
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