Engineering cytoplasmic acetyl-CoA synthesis decouples lipid production from nitrogen starvation in the oleaginous yeast Rhodosporidium azoricum.


Journal

Microbial cell factories
ISSN: 1475-2859
Titre abrégé: Microb Cell Fact
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101139812

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
14 Nov 2019
Historique:
received: 17 07 2019
accepted: 04 11 2019
entrez: 16 11 2019
pubmed: 16 11 2019
medline: 9 4 2020
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Oleaginous yeasts are able to accumulate very high levels of neutral lipids especially under condition of excess of carbon and nitrogen limitation (medium with high C/N ratio). This makes necessary the use of two-steps processes in order to achieve high level of biomass and lipid. To simplify the process, the decoupling of lipid synthesis from nitrogen starvation, by establishing a cytosolic acetyl-CoA formation pathway alternative to the one catalysed by ATP-citrate lyase, can be useful. In this work, we introduced a new cytoplasmic route for acetyl-CoA (AcCoA) formation in Rhodosporidium azoricum by overexpressing genes encoding for homologous phosphoketolase (Xfpk) and heterologous phosphotransacetylase (Pta). The engineered strain PTAPK4 exhibits higher lipid content and produces higher lipid concentration than the wild type strain when it was cultivated in media containing different C/N ratios. In a bioreactor process performed on glucose/xylose mixture, to simulate an industrial process for lipid production from lignocellulosic materials, we obtained an increase of 89% in final lipid concentration by the engineered strain in comparison to the wild type. This indicates that the transformed strain can produce higher cellular biomass with a high lipid content than the wild type. The transformed strain furthermore evidenced the advantage over the wild type in performing this process, being the lipid yields 0.13 and 0.05, respectively. Our results show that the overexpression of homologous Xfpk and heterologous Pta activities in R. azoricum creates a new cytosolic AcCoA supply that decouples lipid production from nitrogen starvation. This metabolic modification allows improving lipid production in cultural conditions that can be suitable for the development of industrial bioprocesses using lignocellulosic hydrolysates.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Oleaginous yeasts are able to accumulate very high levels of neutral lipids especially under condition of excess of carbon and nitrogen limitation (medium with high C/N ratio). This makes necessary the use of two-steps processes in order to achieve high level of biomass and lipid. To simplify the process, the decoupling of lipid synthesis from nitrogen starvation, by establishing a cytosolic acetyl-CoA formation pathway alternative to the one catalysed by ATP-citrate lyase, can be useful.
RESULTS RESULTS
In this work, we introduced a new cytoplasmic route for acetyl-CoA (AcCoA) formation in Rhodosporidium azoricum by overexpressing genes encoding for homologous phosphoketolase (Xfpk) and heterologous phosphotransacetylase (Pta). The engineered strain PTAPK4 exhibits higher lipid content and produces higher lipid concentration than the wild type strain when it was cultivated in media containing different C/N ratios. In a bioreactor process performed on glucose/xylose mixture, to simulate an industrial process for lipid production from lignocellulosic materials, we obtained an increase of 89% in final lipid concentration by the engineered strain in comparison to the wild type. This indicates that the transformed strain can produce higher cellular biomass with a high lipid content than the wild type. The transformed strain furthermore evidenced the advantage over the wild type in performing this process, being the lipid yields 0.13 and 0.05, respectively.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Our results show that the overexpression of homologous Xfpk and heterologous Pta activities in R. azoricum creates a new cytosolic AcCoA supply that decouples lipid production from nitrogen starvation. This metabolic modification allows improving lipid production in cultural conditions that can be suitable for the development of industrial bioprocesses using lignocellulosic hydrolysates.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31727065
doi: 10.1186/s12934-019-1250-6
pii: 10.1186/s12934-019-1250-6
pmc: PMC6854766
doi:

Substances chimiques

Fungal Proteins 0
Lipids 0
Recombinant Proteins 0
lignocellulose 11132-73-3
Acetyl Coenzyme A 72-89-9
Lignin 9005-53-2
Phosphate Acetyltransferase EC 2.3.1.8
Aldehyde-Lyases EC 4.1.2.-
phosphoketolase EC 4.1.2.9
Nitrogen N762921K75

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

199

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Auteurs

Silvia Donzella (S)

Department of Food, Environmental and Nutritional Sciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.

Daniela Cucchetti (D)

Versalis SPA, Green Chemistry CRNO, Novara, Italy.

Claudia Capusoni (C)

Department of Food, Environmental and Nutritional Sciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.

Aurora Rizzi (A)

Department of Food, Environmental and Nutritional Sciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.

Silvia Galafassi (S)

Water Research Institute, National Research Council, Verbania, Italy.

Gambaro Chiara (G)

Eni S.p.A.-Renewable Energy and Environmental R&D Center-Istituto Eni Donegani, Novara, Italy.

Concetta Compagno (C)

Department of Food, Environmental and Nutritional Sciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy. concetta.compagno@unimi.it.

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Classifications MeSH