4.6 Article

Metabolic Engineering of Corynebacterium glutamicum for Methanol Metabolism

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 6, Pages 2215-2225

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.03110-14

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Methanol is already an important carbon feedstock in the chemical industry, but it has found only limited application in biotechnological production processes. This can be mostly attributed to the inability of most microbial platform organisms to utilize methanol as a carbon and energy source. With the aim to turn methanol into a suitable feedstock for microbial production processes, we engineered the industrially important but nonmethylotrophic bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum toward the utilization of methanol as an auxiliary carbon source in a sugar-based medium. Initial oxidation of methanol to formaldehyde was achieved by heterologous expression of a methanol dehydrogenase from Bacillus methanolicus, whereas assimilation of formaldehyde was realized by implementing the two key enzymes of the ribulose monophosphate pathway of Bacillus subtilis: 3-hexulose-6-phosphate synthase and 6-phospho-3-hexuloisomerase. The recombinant C. glutamicum strain showed an average methanol consumption rate of 1.7 +/- 0.3 mM/h (mean +/- standard deviation) in a glucose-methanol medium, and the culture grew to a higher cell density than in medium without methanol. In addition, [C-13] methanol-labeling experiments revealed labeling fractions of 3 to 10% in them + 1 mass isotopomers of various intracellular metabolites. In the background of a C. glutamicum Delta ald Delta adhE mutant being strongly impaired in its ability to oxidize formaldehyde to CO2, them + 1 labeling of these intermediates was increased (8 to 25%), pointing toward higher formaldehyde assimilation capabilities of this strain. The engineered C. glutamicum strains represent a promising starting point for the development of sugar-based biotechnological production processes using methanol as an auxiliary substrate.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available