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      Coupling metabolic addiction with negative autoregulation to improve strain stability and pathway yield

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          Abstract

          Metabolic addiction, an organism that is metabolically addicted with a compound to maintain its growth fitness, is an underexplored area in metabolic engineering. Microbes with heavily engineered pathways or genetic circuits tend to experience metabolic burden leading to degenerated or abortive production phenotype during long-term cultivation or scale-up. A promising solution to combat metabolic instability is to tie up the end-product with an intermediary metabolite that is essential to the growth of the producing host. Here we present a simple strategy to improve both metabolic stability and pathway yield by coupling chemical addiction with negative autoregulatory genetic circuits. Naringenin and lipids compete for the same precursor malonyl-CoA with inversed pathway yield in oleaginous yeast. Negative autoregulation of the lipogenic pathways, enabled by CRISPRi and fatty acid-inducible promoters, repartitions malonyl-CoA to favor flavonoid synthesis and increased naringenin production by 74.8%. With flavonoid-sensing transcriptional activator FdeR and yeast hybrid promoters to control leucine synthesis and cell grwoth fitness, this amino acid feedforward metabolic circuit confers a flavonoid addiction phenotype that selectively enrich the naringenin-producing pupulation in the leucine auxotrophic yeast. The engineered yeast persisted 90.9% of naringenin titer up to 324 generations. Cells without flavonoid addiction regained growth fitness but lost 94.5% of the naringenin titer after cell passage beyond 300 generations. Metabolic addiction and negative autoregulation may be generalized as basic tools to eliminate metabolic heterogeneity, improve strain stability and pathway yield in long-term and large-scale bioproduction.

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          Most cited references41

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          Engineering the push and pull of lipid biosynthesis in oleaginous yeast Yarrowia lipolytica for biofuel production.

          Microbial oil production by heterotrophic organisms is a promising path for the cost-effective production of biofuels from renewable resources provided high conversion yields can be achieved. To this end, we have engineered the oleaginous yeast Yarrowia lipolytica. We first established an expression platform for high expression using an intron-containing translation elongation factor-1α (TEF) promoter and showed that this expression system is capable of increasing gene expression 17-fold over the intronless TEF promoter. We then used this platform for the overexpression of diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGA1), the final step of the triglyceride (TAG) synthesis pathway, which yielded a 4-fold increase in lipid production over control, to a lipid content of 33.8% of dry cell weight (DCW). We also show that the overexpression of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC1), the first committed step of fatty acid synthesis, increased lipid content 2-fold over control, or 17.9% lipid content. Next we combined the two genes in a tandem gene construct for the simultaneous coexpression of ACC1 and DGA1, which further increased lipid content to 41.4%, demonstrating synergistic effects of ACC1+DGA1 coexpression. The lipid production characteristics of the ACC1+DGA1 transformant were explored in a 2-L bioreactor fermentation, achieving 61.7% lipid content after 120h. The overall yield and productivity were 0.195g/g and 0.143g/L/h, respectively, while the maximum yield and productivity were 0.270g/g and 0.253g/L/h during the lipid accumulation phase of the fermentation. This work demonstrates the excellent capacity for lipid production by the oleaginous yeast Y. lipolytica and the effects of metabolic engineering of two important steps of the lipid synthesis pathway, which acts to divert flux towards the lipid synthesis and creates driving force for TAG synthesis. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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            Lipid production in Yarrowia lipolytica is maximized by engineering cytosolic redox metabolism

            Cytosolic redox metabolism is rewired to improve lipid yield and productivity in the industrial yeast Yarrowia lipolytica
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              Yarrowia lipolytica as a biotechnological chassis to produce usual and unusual fatty acids.

              One of the most promising alternatives to petroleum for the production of fuels and chemicals is bio-oil based chemistry. Microbial oils are gaining importance because they can be engineered to accumulate lipids enriched in desired fatty acids. These specific lipids are closer to the commercialized product, therefore reducing pollutants and costly chemical steps. Yarrowia lipolytica is the most widely studied and engineered oleaginous yeast. Different molecular and bioinformatics tools permit systems metabolic engineering strategies in this yeast, which can produce usual and unusual fatty acids. Usual fatty acids, those usually found in triacylglycerol, accumulate through the action of several pathways, such as fatty acid/triacylglycerol synthesis, transport and degradation. Unusual fatty acids are enzymatic modifications of usual fatty acids to produce compounds that are not naturally synthetized in the host. Recently, the metabolic engineering of microorganisms has produced different unusual fatty acids, such as building block ricinoleic acid and nutraceuticals such as conjugated linoleic acid or polyunsaturated fatty acids. Additionally, microbial sources are preferred hosts for the production of fatty acid-derived compounds such as γ-decalactone, hexanal and dicarboxylic acids. The variety of lipids produced by oleaginous microorganisms is expected to rise in the coming years to cope with the increasing demand.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Metab Eng
                Metab. Eng
                Metabolic Engineering
                Academic Press
                1096-7176
                1096-7184
                1 September 2020
                September 2020
                : 61
                : 79-88
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Chemical, Biochemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD, 21250, USA
                [b ]School of Chemical Engineering, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, Henan, 450001, China
                [c ]National Engineering Laboratory for Cereal Fermentation Technology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi, Jiangsu, 214122, China
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. pengxu@ 123456umbc.edu
                [∗∗ ]Corresponding author. zhoujw1982@ 123456jiangnan.edu.cn
                [∗∗∗ ]Corresponding author. xujl@ 123456zzu.edu.cn
                Article
                S1096-7176(20)30093-8
                10.1016/j.ymben.2020.05.005
                7510839
                32445959
                570ec9dd-b1d3-4d6c-b33e-a5254059ae93
                © 2020 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 30 April 2020
                : 14 May 2020
                Categories
                Original Research Article

                synthetic biology,metabolic addiction,negative autoregulation,strain stability,cell fitness,metabolic heterogeneity

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