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C-13 Metabolic Flux Analysis for Systematic Metabolic Engineering of S. cerevisiae for Overproduction of Fatty Acids
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Metadata
Document Title
C-13 Metabolic Flux Analysis for Systematic Metabolic Engineering of S. cerevisiae for Overproduction of Fatty Acids
Author
Ghosh A, Ando D, Gin J, Runguphan W, Denby C, Wang G, Baidoo EEK, Shymansky C, Keasling JD, Martin HG
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
United States Department of Energy (DOE); Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; United States Department of Energy (DOE); Joint BioEnergy Institute - JBEI; Indian Institute of Technology System (IIT System); Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) - Kharagpur; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); University of California System; University of California Berkeley; University of California System; University of California Berkeley; Technical University of Denmark
Type
Article
Source Title
FRONTIERS IN BIOENGINEERING AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Year
2016
Volume
4
Open Access
Green Published, gold
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI
10.3389/fbioe.2016.00076
Format
Abstract
Efficient redirection of microbial metabolism into the abundant production of desired bioproducts remains non-trivial. Here, we used flux-based modeling approaches to improve yields of fatty acids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We combined C-13 labeling data with comprehensive genome-scale models to shed light onto microbial metabolism and improve metabolic engineering efforts. We concentrated on studying the balance of acetyl-CoA, a precursor metabolite for the biosynthesis of fatty acids. A genomewide acetyl-CoA balance study showed ATP citrate lyase from Yarrowia lipolytica as a robust source of cytoplasmic acetyl-CoA and malate synthase as a desirable target for downregulation in terms of acetyl-CoA consumption. These genetic modifications were applied to S. cerevisiae WRY2, a strain that is capable of producing 460 mg/L of free fatty acids. With the addition of ATP citrate lyase and downregulation of malate synthase, the engineered strain produced 26% more free fatty acids. Further increases in free fatty acid production of 33% were obtained by knocking out the cytoplasmic glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, which flux analysis had shown was competing for carbon flux upstream with the carbon flux through the acetyl-CoA production pathway in the cytoplasm. In total, the genetic interventions applied in this work increased fatty acid production by similar to 70%.
Keyword
-omits data | C-13 metabolic flux analysis | flux analysis | metabolic engineering | predictive biology
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
Funding Sponsor
Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF10CC1016517] Funding Source: researchfish; NNF Center for Biosustainability [Synthetic Biology Tools for Yeast] Funding Source: researchfish
License
CC BY
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS