4.5 Article

Enhancement of protocatechuate decarboxylase activity for the effective production of muconate from lignin-related aromatic compounds

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 192, Issue -, Pages 71-77

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2014.10.027

Keywords

Protocatechuate decarboxylase; Cis,cis-muconate; Lignin; Biocatalysis

Funding

  1. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JSPS KAKENHI) [26850041]
  2. Hirosaki University Grant for Exploratory Research
  3. Hirosaki University
  4. Hirosaki University Institutional Research Grant
  5. USDA Multistate Hatch program [VA-136288]
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26850041] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The decarboxylation reaction of protocatechuate has been described as a bottleneck and a rate-limiting step in cis,cis-muconate (ccMA) bioproduction from renewable feedstocks such as sugar. Because sugars are already in high demand in the development of many bio-based products, our work focuses on improving protocatechuate decarboxylase (Pdc) activity and ccMA production in particular, from lignin related aromatic compounds. We previously had transformed an Escherichia coli strain using aroY, which had been used as a protocatechuate decarboxylase encoding gene from Klebsiella pneumoniae subsp. pneumoniae A170-40, and inserted other required genes from Pseudomonas putida KT2440, to allow the production of ccMA from vanillin. This recombinant strain produced ccMA from vanillin, however the Pdc reaction step remained a bottleneck during incubation. In the current study, we identify a way to increase protocatechuate decarboxylase activity in E. coli through enzyme production involving both aroY and kpdB; the latter which encodes for the B subunit of 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase. This permits expression of Pdc activity at a level approximately 14-fold greater than the strain with aroY only. The expression level of AroY increased, apparently as a function of the co-expression of AroY and KpdB. Our results also imply that ccMA may inhibit vanillate demethylation, a reaction step that is rate limiting for efficient ccMA production from lignin-related aromatic compounds, so even though ccMA production may be enhanced, other challenges to overcome vanilate demethylation inhibition still remain. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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