| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6490323 | Journal of Biotechnology | 2018 | 22 Pages | 
Abstract
												Phycoerythrobilin (PEB) is an open-chain tetrapyrrole derived from heme and plays an important role as light-harvesting pigment in the phycobiliproteins of cyanobacteria and red algae. Furthermore, PEB can also function as an antioxidant with potential use as a natural acid stable food colorant. PEB is not commercially available and large, pure quantities can only be obtained by laborious methanolysis of red algae followed by liquid chromatography. Here we describe an improved method for high yield production and purification of PEB in Escherichia coli via heterologous expression where the two required enzymes heme oxygenase and PEB synthase subsequently convert the substrate heme provided by the host cell. Experiments in shaking flasks resulted in the highest product yield of 680.23â¯Â±â¯42.75â¯Î¼g PEB per g cell dry weight, by induction with 0.1â¯mM IPTG. Scale-up to batch-operated fermentation in a 2â¯L bioreactor reached product concentrations up to 5.02â¯mg PEB Lâ1 by adjustment of aeration, induction time, media composition and supplementation of precursors. A further approach included separation of PEB from developed foam above the culture. This enabled continuous product collection during cultivation and simplified product purification. Produced PEB was validated via UV-vis spectroscopy, high pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry.
											Keywords
												IPTGYPSPhycobiliproteinPBPDHBVPEBALATFACDWPBSUV–VisTrifluoroacetic acidδ-aminolevulinic acidEscherichia coliUltraviolet–visibleisopropyl-β-d-thiogalactopyranosideBiliverdinFoam separationMass spectrometryPhycoerythrobilinPhosphate buffered salineheme oxygenasecell dry weighthigh performance liquid chromatographyHPLC
												Related Topics
												
													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Chemical Engineering
													Bioengineering
												
											Authors
												Judith Stiefelmaier, Benjamin Ledermann, Michael Sorg, Angela Banek, Doris Geib, Roland Ulber, Nicole Frankenberg-Dinkel, 
											