Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6494576 | Metabolic Engineering | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
We observed that removing pantothenate (vitamin B5), a precursor to co-enzyme A, from the growth medium of Saccharomyces cerevisiae engineered to produce β-farnesene reduced the strain׳s farnesene flux by 70%, but increased its viability, growth rate and biomass yield. Conversely, the growth rate and biomass yield of wild-type yeast were reduced. Cultivation in media lacking pantothenate eliminates the growth advantage of low-producing mutants, leading to improved production upon scale-up to lab-scale bioreactor testing. An omics investigation revealed that when exogenous pantothenate levels are limited, acyl-CoA metabolites decrease, β-oxidation decreases from unexpectedly high levels in the farnesene producer, and sterol and fatty acid synthesis likely limits the growth rate of the wild-type strain. Thus pantothenate supplementation can be utilized as a “metabolic switch” for tuning the synthesis rates of molecules relying on CoA intermediates and aid the economic scale-up of strains producing acyl-CoA derived molecules to manufacturing facilities.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
Celeste M. Sandoval, Marites Ayson, Nathan Moss, Bonny Lieu, Peter Jackson, Sara P. Gaucher, Tizita Horning, Robert H. Dahl, Judith R. Denery, Derek A. Abbott, Adam L. Meadows,