“…Previous L-tyrosine engineering work has most often focused on the transcriptional deregulation of the tyrR and/or trpR regulons, followed by removing the feedback inhibition on two key enzymes, 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate (DAHP) synthase (AroG), which catalyzes the first step committed to the shikimate pathway, and the dual-function chorismate mutase/prephenate dehydrogenase (TyrA), which catalyzes the first two steps in L-tyrosine biosynthesis from chorismate (26,33). Coexpression of the rate-limiting enzymes, shikimate kinase (AroK or AroL) and quinate (QUIN)/shikimate dehydrogenase (YdiB), and deletion of the L-phenylalanine branch of the aromatic amino acid biosynthetic pathway have been shown to increase L-tyrosine production (12,25,33). Furthermore, overexpression of phosphoenolpyruvate synthase (PpsA) and transke-tolase A (TktA), altering glucose transport and the use of other carbon sources, such as xylose and arabinose, have also been shown to increase the pools of precursors to the shikimate pathway (1,9,22,26,34,47,48).…”