Engineered strains of the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
are intensively studied as production platforms for aromatic compounds such as hydroxycinnamic acids, stilbenoids and flavonoids. Heterologous pathways for production of these compounds use
l
-phenylalanine and/or
l
-tyrosine, generated by the yeast shikimate pathway, as aromatic precursors. The Ehrlich pathway converts these precursors to aromatic fusel alcohols and acids, which are undesirable by-products of yeast strains engineered for production of high-value aromatic compounds. Activity of the Ehrlich pathway requires any of four
S. cerevisiae
2-oxo-acid decarboxylases (2-OADCs): Aro10 or the pyruvate-decarboxylase isoenzymes Pdc1, Pdc5, and Pdc6. Elimination of pyruvate-decarboxylase activity from
S. cerevisiae
is not straightforward as it plays a key role in cytosolic acetyl-CoA biosynthesis during growth on glucose. In a search for pyruvate decarboxylases that do not decarboxylate aromatic 2-oxo acids, eleven yeast and bacterial 2-OADC-encoding genes were investigated. Homologs from
Kluyveromyces lactis
(
KlPDC1
),
Kluyveromyces marxianus
(
KmPDC1
),
Yarrowia lipolytica
(
YlPDC1
),
Zymomonas mobilis
(
Zmpdc1
) and
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus
(
Gdpdc1.2
and
Gdpdc1.3
) complemented a Pdc
−
strain of
S. cerevisiae
for growth on glucose. Enzyme-activity assays in cell extracts showed that these genes encoded active pyruvate decarboxylases with different substrate specificities. In these
in vitro
assays,
Zm
Pdc1,
Gd
Pdc1.2 or
Gd
Pdc1.3 had no substrate specificity towards phenylpyruvate. Replacing Aro10 and Pdc1,5,6 by these bacterial decarboxylases completely eliminated aromatic fusel-alcohol production in glucose-grown batch cultures of an engineered coumaric acid-producing
S. cerevisiae
strain. These results outline a strategy to prevent formation of an important class of by-products in ‘chassis’ yeast strains for production of non-native aromatic compounds.
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