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Journal article

Engineered Production of Short-Chain Acyl-Coenzyme A Esters in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

From

Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology1

Joint Bioenergy Institute2

Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability, Technical University of Denmark3

Synthetic Biology Tools for Yeast, Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability, Technical University of Denmark4

Synthetic Biology Engineering Research Center5

Short-chain acyl-coenzyme A esters serve as intermediate compounds in fatty acid biosynthesis, and the production of polyketides, biopolymers and other value-added chemicals. S. cerevisiae is a model organism that has been utilized for the biosynthesis of such biologically and economically valuable compounds.

However, its limited repertoire of short-chain acyl-CoAs effectively prevents its application as a production host for a plethora of natural products. Therefore, we introduced biosynthetic metabolic pathways to five different acyl-CoA esters into S. cerevisiae. Our engineered strains provide the following acyl-CoAs: propionyl-CoA, methylmalonyl-CoA, n-butyryl-CoA, isovaleryl-CoA and n-hexanoyl-CoA.

We established a yeast-specific metabolite extraction protocol to determine the intracellular acyl-CoA concentrations in the engineered strains. Propionyl-CoA was produced at 4-9 μM; methylmalonyl-CoA at 0.5 μM; and isovaleryl-CoA, n-butyryl-CoA, and n-hexanoyl-CoA at 6 μM each. The acyl-CoAs produced in this study are common building blocks of secondary metabolites and will enable the engineered production of a variety of natural products in S. cerevisiae.

By providing this toolbox of acyl-CoA producing strains, we have laid the foundation to explore S. cerevisiae as a heterologous production host for novel secondary metabolites.

Language: English
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Year: 2018
Pages: 1105-1115
ISSN: 21615063
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.7b00466
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-6677-555X , 0000-0003-3685-0894 , 0000-0001-8358-2787 , 0000-0003-4170-6088 , Jakociunas, Tadas and Jensen, Michael K.

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