The technology is available to produce fuel ethanol from renewable lignocellulosic biomass. The current challenge is to assemble the various process options into a commercial venture and begin the task of incremental improvement. Current process designs for lignocellulose are far more complex than grain to ethanol processes. This complexity results in part from the complexity of the substrate and the biological limitations of the catalyst. Our work at the University of Florida has focused primarily on the genetic engineering of Enteric bacteria using genes encoding Zymomonas mobilis pyruvate decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase. These two genes have been assembled into a portable ethanol production cassette, the PET operon, and integrated into the chromosome of Escherichia coli B for use with hemicellulose-derived syrups. The resulting strain, KO11, produces ethanol efficiently from all hexose and pentose sugars present in the polymers of hemicellulose. By using the same approach, we integrated the PET operon into the chromosome of Klebsiella oxytoca to produce strain P2 for use in the simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) process for cellulose. Strain P2 has the native ability to ferment cellobiose and cellotriose, eliminating the need for one class of cellulase enzymes. Recently, the ability to produce and secrete high levels of endoglucanase has also been added to strain P2, further reducing the requirement for fungal cellulase. The general approach for the genetic engineering of new biocatalysts using the PET operon has been most successful with Enteric bacteria but was also extended to Gram positive bacteria, which have other useful traits for lignocellulose conversion. Many opportunities remain for further improvements in these biocatalysts as we proceed toward the development of single organisms that can be used for the efficient fermentation of both hemicellulosic and cellulosic substrates.
Previous studies have shown that high levels of complex nutrients (Luria broth or 5% corn steep liquor) were necessary for rapid ethanol production by the ethanologenic strain Escherichia coli KO11. Although this strain is prototrophic, cell density and ethanol production remained low in mineral salts media (10% xylose) unless complex nutrients were added. The basis for this nutrient requirement was identified as a regulatory problem created by metabolic engineering of an ethanol pathway. Cells must partition pyruvate between competing needs for biosynthesis and regeneration of NAD ؉ . Expression of low-K m Zymomonas mobilis pdc (pyruvate decarboxylase) in KO11 reduced the flow of pyruvate carbon into native fermentation pathways as desired, but it also restricted the flow of carbon skeletons into the 2-ketoglutarate arm of the tricarboxylic acid pathway (biosynthesis). In mineral salts medium containing 1% corn steep liquor and 10% xylose, the detrimental effect of metabolic engineering was substantially reduced by addition of pyruvate. A similar benefit was also observed when acetaldehyde, 2-ketoglutarate, or glutamate was added. In E. coli, citrate synthase links the cellular abundance of NADH to the supply of 2-ketoglutarate for glutamate biosynthesis. This enzyme is allosterically regulated and inhibited by high NADH concentrations. In addition, citrate synthase catalyzes the first committed step in 2-ketoglutarate synthesis. Oxidation of NADH by added acetaldehyde (or pyruvate) would be expected to increase the activity of E. coli citrate synthase and direct more carbon into 2-ketoglutarate, and this may explain the stimulation of growth. This hypothesis was tested, in part, by cloning the Bacillus subtilis citZ gene encoding an NADH-insensitive citrate synthase. Expression of recombinant citZ in KO11 was accompanied by increases in cell growth and ethanol production, which substantially reduced the need for complex nutrients.The engineering of metabolic pathways for production of industrial chemicals from renewable carbohydrates offers an alternative to petroleum-based processes and chemical synthesis (3,12,22). Genetically altering metabolic pathways, however, often causes unanticipated changes which may limit utility. Undesirable changes, such as reduced growth, decreased glycolytic flux, and low volumetric productivity, are generally attributed to a lack of ATP (19, 50), creation of futile cycles (10,11,37), changes in intracellular metabolite pools, or a metabolic imbalance (2,7,9,13,28,51,53). Often, these detrimental effects are masked by abundant complex nutrients in laboratory media and are apparent only in more minimal media (7,10,11,31).Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium was engineered for succinate production by increasing expression of pyc encoding pyruvate carboxylase (50). Although succinate production increased, the growth rate declined by 18% and the glycolytic flux decreased by 40%. Similar results were reported for an analogous construction in Escherichia coli (19). Donnelly and cow...
Limited cell growth and the resulting low volumetric productivity of ethanologenic Escherichia coli KO11 in mineral salts medium containing xylose have been attributed to inadequate partitioning of carbon skeletons into the synthesis of glutamate and other products derived from the citrate arm of the anaerobic tricarboxylic acid pathway. The results of nuclear magnetic resonance investigations of intracellular osmolytes under different growth conditions coupled with those of studies using genetically modified strains have confirmed and extended this hypothesis. During anaerobic growth in mineral salts medium containing 9% xylose (600 mM) and 1% corn steep liquor, proline was the only abundant osmolyte (71.9 nmol ml ؊1 optical density at 550 nm [OD 550 ] unit ؊1 ), and growth was limited. Under aerobic conditions in the same medium, twice the cell mass was produced, and cells contained a mixture of osmolytes: glutamate (17.0 nmol ml ؊1 OD 550 unit ؊1 ), trehalose (9.9 nmol ml ؊1 OD 550 unit ؊1 ), and betaine (19.8 nmol ml ؊1 OD 550 unit ؊1 ). Two independent genetic modifications of E. coli KO11 (functional expression of Bacillus subtilis citZ encoding NADH-insensitive citrate synthase; deletion of ackA encoding acetate kinase) and the addition of a metabolite, such as glutamate (11 mM) or acetate (24 mM), as a supplement each increased the intracellular glutamate pool during fermentation, doubled cell growth, and increased volumetric productivity. This apparent requirement for a larger glutamate pool for increased growth and volumetric productivity was completely eliminated by the addition of a protective osmolyte (2 mM betaine or 0.25 mM dimethylsulfoniopropionate), consistent with adaptation to osmotic stress rather than relief of a specific biosynthetic requirement.
The production of ethanol from xylose by ethanologenic Escherichia coli strain KO11 was improved by adding various medium supplements (acetate, pyruvate, and acetaldehyde) that prolonged the growth phase by increasing cell yield and volumetric productivity (approximately twofold). Although added pyruvate and acetaldehyde were rapidly metabolized, the benefit of these additives continued throughout fermentation. Both additives increased the levels of extracellular acetate through different mechanisms. Since acetate can be reversibly converted to acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) by acetate kinase and phosphotransacetylase, the increase in cell yield caused by each of the three supplements is proposed to result from an increase in the pool of acetyl-CoA. A similar benefit was obtained by inactivation of acetate kinase (ackA), reducing the production of acetate (and ATP) and sparing acetyl-CoA for biosynthetic needs. Inactivation of native E. coli alcoholaldehyde dehydrogenase (adhE), which uses acetyl-CoA as an electron acceptor, had no beneficial effect on growth, which was consistent with a minor role for this enzyme during ethanol production. Growth of KO11 on xylose appears to be limited by the partitioning of carbon skeletons into biosynthesis rather than the level of ATP. Changes in acetyl-CoA production and consumption provide a useful approach to modulate carbon partitioning. Together, these results demonstrate that xylose fermentation to ethanol can be improved in KO11 by redirecting small amounts of pyruvate away from fermentation products and into biosynthesis. Though negligible with respect to ethanol yield, these small changes in carbon partitioning reduced the time required to complete the fermentation of 9.1% xylose in 1% corn steep liquor medium from over 96 h to less than 72 h.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.