Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7065752 | Bioresource Technology | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Saccharomyces cerevisiae has a natural ability to produce higher alcohols, making it a promising candidate for production of isobutanol. However, the several pathways competing with isobutanol biosynthesis lead to production of substantial amounts of l-valine and l-isoleucine in mitochondria and isobutyrate, l-leucine, and ethanol in cytosol. To increase flux to isobutanol by removing by-product formation, the genes associated with formation of l-valine (BAT1), l-isoleucine (ILV1), isobutyrate (ALD6), l-leucine (LEU1), and ethanol (ADH1) were disrupted to construct the S. cerevisiae WÎGBIALA1_2vec strain. This strain showed 8.9 and 8.6 folds increases in isobutanol concentration and yield, respectively, relative the corresponding values of the background strain on glucose medium. In a bioreactor fermentation with a gas trapping system, the WÎGBIALA1_2vec strain produced 662â¯mg/L isobutanol concentration with a yield of 6.71â¯mgisobutanol/gglucose. With elimination of the competing pathways, the WÎGBIALA1_2vec strain would serve as a platform strain for isobutanol production.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Process Chemistry and Technology
Authors
Kyung-Muk Lee, Sun-Ki Kim, Ye-Gi Lee, Kyung-Hye Park, Jin-Ho Seo,