4.7 Article

Combining directed evolution of pathway enzymes and dynamic pathway regulation using a quorum-sensing circuit to improve the production of 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid in Escherichia coli

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13068-019-1438-3

Keywords

4-Hydroxyphenylacetic acid; Directed evolution; Dynamic pathway regulation; Quorum-sensing system; Escherichia coli

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21276289, 201808248]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province [2015A030311036, 2018A030310255]
  3. Project of the Scientific and Technical Program of Guangdong Province [2015A010107004]
  4. Project of the Scientific and Technical Program of Guangzhou [201607010028]

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Background4-Hydroxyphenylacetic acid (4HPAA) is an important building block for synthesizing drugs, agrochemicals, biochemicals, etc. 4HPAA is currently produced exclusively via petrochemical processes and the process is environmentally unfriendly and unsustainable. Microbial cell factory would be an attractive approach for 4HPAA production.ResultsIn the present study, we established a microbial biosynthetic system for the de novo production of 4HPAA from glucose in Escherichia coli. First, we compared different biosynthetic pathways for the production of 4HPAA. The yeast Ehrlich pathway produced the highest level of 4HPAA among these pathways that were evaluated. To increase the pathway efficiency, the yeast Ehrlich pathway enzymes were directedly evolved via error-prone PCR. Two phenylpyruvate decarboxylase ARO10 and phenylacetaldehyde dehydrogenase FeaB variants that outperformed the wild-type enzymes were obtained. These mutations increased the in vitro and in vivo catalytic efficiency for converting 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate to 4HPAA. A tunable intergenic region (TIGR) sequence was inserted into the two evolved genes to balance their expression. Regulation of TIGR for the evolved pathway enzymes further improved the production of 4HPAA, resulting in a 1.13-fold increase in titer compared with the fusion wild-type pathway. To prevent the toxicity of a heterologous pathway to the cell, an Esa quorum-sensing (QS) circuit with both activating and repressing functions was developed for inducer-free productions of metabolites. The Esa-P-esaR activation QS system was used to dynamically control the biosynthetic pathway of 4HPAA in E. coli, which achieved 17.390.26g/L with a molar yield of 23.2% without addition of external inducers, resulting in a 46.4% improvement of the titer compared to the statically controlled pathway.Conclusion p id=Par3 We have constructed an E. coli for 4HPAA production with the highest titer to date. This study also demonstrates that the combination of directed evolution of pathway enzymes and dynamic pathway regulation using a QS circuit is a powerful strategy of metabolic engineering for the productions of metabolites.

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