The four-carbon (C4) dicarboxylic acids, fumarate, malate, and succinate, are the most valuable targets that must be exploited for CO2-based chemical production in the move to a sustainable low-carbon future. Cyanobacteria excrete high amounts of C4 dicarboxylic acids through glycogen fermentation in a dark anoxic environment. The enhancement of metabolic flux in the reductive TCA branch in the Cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 is a key issue in the C4 dicarboxylic acid production. To improve metabolic flux through the anaplerotic pathway, we have created the recombinant strain PCCK, which expresses foreign ATP-forming phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPck) concurrent with intrinsic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (Ppc) overexpression. Expression of PEPck concurrent with Ppc led to an increase in C4 dicarboxylic acids by autofermentation. Metabolome analysis revealed that PEPck contributed to an increase in carbon flux from hexose and pentose phosphates into the TCA reductive branch. To enhance the metabolic flux in the reductive TCA branch, we examined the effect of corn-steep liquor (CSL) as a nutritional supplement on C4 dicarboxylic acid production. Surprisingly, the addition of sterilized CSL enhanced the malate production in the PCCK strain. Thereafter, the malate and fumarate excreted by the PCCK strain are converted into succinate by the CSL-settling microorganisms. Finally, high-density cultivation of cells lacking the acetate kinase gene showed the highest production of malate and fumarate (3.2 and 2.4 g/L with sterilized CSL) and succinate (5.7 g/L with non-sterile CSL) after 72 h cultivation. The present microbial community engineering is useful for succinate production by one-pot fermentation under dark anoxic conditions.
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