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Metabolic engineering and random mutagenesis for improved xylose utilisation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Wahlbom, Fredrik LU (2002)
Abstract
In this thesis I have summarised my work on the analysis and improvement of xylose utilisation by recombinant S. cerevisiae. A metabolic flux model was developed and used to analyse the intracellular fluxes in the recombinant xylose utilising S. cerevisiae TMB 3001 cultivated in chemostat at various dilution rates and xylose/glucose concentrations. Xylose uptake increased with xylose concentration in the feed and with decreasing dilution rate. The fraction of NADH-mediated xylose reduction increased with increasing dilution rate and with increasing xylose concentration in the feed. The flux between ribulose 5-phosphate and xylulose 5-phosphate was very low during all cultivation experiments with xylose/glucose in the feed. The aerobic... (More)
In this thesis I have summarised my work on the analysis and improvement of xylose utilisation by recombinant S. cerevisiae. A metabolic flux model was developed and used to analyse the intracellular fluxes in the recombinant xylose utilising S. cerevisiae TMB 3001 cultivated in chemostat at various dilution rates and xylose/glucose concentrations. Xylose uptake increased with xylose concentration in the feed and with decreasing dilution rate. The fraction of NADH-mediated xylose reduction increased with increasing dilution rate and with increasing xylose concentration in the feed. The flux between ribulose 5-phosphate and xylulose 5-phosphate was very low during all cultivation experiments with xylose/glucose in the feed. The aerobic conversion of xylose to pyruvate does not introduce new thermodynamic bottlenecks compared with glucose conversion to pyruvate. The thermodynamics of the reactions catalysed by xylose reductase and xylitol dehydrogenase are favourable over a larger metabolite concentration range if NADPH is used for xylose reduction and NAD+ is used for xylitol oxidation, respectively. Xylitol excretion in recombinant xylose utilising S. cerevisiae TMB 3001 is halted by addition of electron acceptors like acetoin and acetaldehyde which are reduced in NADH-coupled reactions. Also furfural, which is present in lignocellulosic hydrolysates, decreased xylitol formation. Xylitol and also glycerol by-product formation would be prevented if enzymatic activities for phosphoketolase, phosphate acetyl transferase and acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (acylating) were introduced in S. cerevisiae. In such a hypothetical pathway, excessive NADH formed either from xylitol oxidation or amino acid synthesis would be regenerated to NAD+ by converting acetyl-phosphate, formed in the phosphoketolase reaction, to ethanol using phosphate acetyl transferase, acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (acylating) and alcohol dehydrogenase. Random mutagenesis was successfully used to develop the recombinant S. cerevisiae TMB 3400 that has a maximum specific growth rate of 0.14 h-1 on xylose, compared to 0.025 h-1 for its parental strain, the non-mutated, recombinant S. cerevisiae TMB 3399. S. cerevisiae TMB 3400 showed elevated mRNA expression levels of genes involved in transport, initial xylose metabolism and in the pentose phosphate pathway. The biomass yield of S. cerevisiae TMB 3400 on xylose, 0.43 g biomass g xylose-1, was lower than that on glucose, 0.47 g biomass g glucose-1. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • Dr Sauer, Uwe, Institute of Biotechnology, ETH, Zurich, Schweiz
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Biokemisk teknik, Biochemical technology, mykologi, virologi, bacteriology, Microbiology, Kemiteknik och kemisk teknologi, Chemical technology and engineering, ethanol, Saccharomyces, xylose, virology, mycology, Mikrobiologi, bakteriologi
pages
156 pages
publisher
The Secretary, Department of Applied Microbiology, Lund University
defense location
Hall C, Chemical Center, Sölvegatan 39, Lund
defense date
2002-04-12 10:15:00
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Article: I) Wahlbom, C. F., Eliasson, A. and Hahn-Hägerdal, B. (2001) Intracellular fluxes in a recombinant xylose-utilizing Saccharomyces cerevisiae cultivated anaerobically at different dilution rates and feed concentrationsBiotechnol. Bioeng. 72(3), 289-296. Article: II) Wahlbom, C.F. and Hahn-Hägerdal, B. A thermodynamic feasibility analysis of yeast xylose utilisationManuscript Article: III) Wahlbom, C. F. and Hahn-Hägerdal, B. (2002) Furfural, 5-hydroxymethyl furfural and acetoin act as external electron acceptors during anaerobic fermentation of xylose by recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiaeBiotechnol. Bioeng. 78(2), 172-178. Article: IV) Wahlbom, C. F., van Zyl, W. H., Jönsson, L. J., Hahn-Hägerdal, B and Cordero Otero, R. R. Random mutagenesis generated the superior recombinant, D-xylose utilizing Saccharomyces cerevisiae TMB 3400; A physiological comparison with Pichia stipitis CBS 6054Submitted for publication. Article: V) Wahlbom, C. F., Cordero Otero, R. R., van Zyl, W. H., Hahn-Hägerdal, B. and Jönsson, L. J. Molecular analysis of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant with improved ability to utilise xylose shows enhanced expression of proteins involved in transport, initial xylose metabolism and the pentose phosphate pathwaySubmitted for publication.
id
6639029b-b2e5-4a57-a129-c3eb5a8eaefd (old id 464506)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 12:10:00
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:09:23
@phdthesis{6639029b-b2e5-4a57-a129-c3eb5a8eaefd,
  abstract     = {{In this thesis I have summarised my work on the analysis and improvement of xylose utilisation by recombinant S. cerevisiae. A metabolic flux model was developed and used to analyse the intracellular fluxes in the recombinant xylose utilising S. cerevisiae TMB 3001 cultivated in chemostat at various dilution rates and xylose/glucose concentrations. Xylose uptake increased with xylose concentration in the feed and with decreasing dilution rate. The fraction of NADH-mediated xylose reduction increased with increasing dilution rate and with increasing xylose concentration in the feed. The flux between ribulose 5-phosphate and xylulose 5-phosphate was very low during all cultivation experiments with xylose/glucose in the feed. The aerobic conversion of xylose to pyruvate does not introduce new thermodynamic bottlenecks compared with glucose conversion to pyruvate. The thermodynamics of the reactions catalysed by xylose reductase and xylitol dehydrogenase are favourable over a larger metabolite concentration range if NADPH is used for xylose reduction and NAD+ is used for xylitol oxidation, respectively. Xylitol excretion in recombinant xylose utilising S. cerevisiae TMB 3001 is halted by addition of electron acceptors like acetoin and acetaldehyde which are reduced in NADH-coupled reactions. Also furfural, which is present in lignocellulosic hydrolysates, decreased xylitol formation. Xylitol and also glycerol by-product formation would be prevented if enzymatic activities for phosphoketolase, phosphate acetyl transferase and acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (acylating) were introduced in S. cerevisiae. In such a hypothetical pathway, excessive NADH formed either from xylitol oxidation or amino acid synthesis would be regenerated to NAD+ by converting acetyl-phosphate, formed in the phosphoketolase reaction, to ethanol using phosphate acetyl transferase, acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (acylating) and alcohol dehydrogenase. Random mutagenesis was successfully used to develop the recombinant S. cerevisiae TMB 3400 that has a maximum specific growth rate of 0.14 h-1 on xylose, compared to 0.025 h-1 for its parental strain, the non-mutated, recombinant S. cerevisiae TMB 3399. S. cerevisiae TMB 3400 showed elevated mRNA expression levels of genes involved in transport, initial xylose metabolism and in the pentose phosphate pathway. The biomass yield of S. cerevisiae TMB 3400 on xylose, 0.43 g biomass g xylose-1, was lower than that on glucose, 0.47 g biomass g glucose-1.}},
  author       = {{Wahlbom, Fredrik}},
  keywords     = {{Biokemisk teknik; Biochemical technology; mykologi; virologi; bacteriology; Microbiology; Kemiteknik och kemisk teknologi; Chemical technology and engineering; ethanol; Saccharomyces; xylose; virology; mycology; Mikrobiologi; bakteriologi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{The Secretary, Department of Applied Microbiology, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Metabolic engineering and random mutagenesis for improved xylose utilisation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}