4.7 Article

Heterologous production of the epoxycarotenoid violaxanthin in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal

METABOLIC ENGINEERING
Volume 59, Issue -, Pages 53-63

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2020.01.006

Keywords

Carotenoid; Xanthophyll; Epoxycarotenoid; Violaxanthin; Metabolic engineering; Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Funding

  1. FONDECYT from CONICYT [1170745]
  2. CONICYT

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Microbial production of carotenoids has mainly focused towards a few products, such as beta-carotene, lycopene and astaxanthin. However, other less explored carotenoids, like violaxanthin, have also shown unique properties and promissory applications. Violaxanthin is a plant-derived epoxidated carotenoid with strong antioxidant activity and a key precursor of valuable compounds, such as fucoxanthin and beta-damascenone. In this study, we report for the first time the heterologous production of epoxycarotenoids in yeast. We engineered the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae following multi-level strategies for the efficient accumulation of violaxanthin. Starting from a beta-carotenogenic yeast strain, we first evaluated the performance of several beta-carotene hydroxylases (CrtZ), and zeaxanthin epoxidases (ZEP) from different species, together with their respective N-terminal truncated variants. The combined expression of CrtZ from Pantoea ananatis and truncated ZEP of Haematococcus lacustris showed the best performance and led to a yield of 1.6 mg/g(DCW) of violaxanthin. Further improvement of the epoxidase activity was achieved by promoting the transfer of reducing equivalents to ZEP by expressing several redox partner systems. The co-expression of the plant truncated ferredoxin-3, and truncated root ferredoxin oxidoreductase-1 resulted in a 2.2-fold increase in violaxanthin yield (3.2 mg/g(DCW)). Finally, increasing gene copy number of carotenogenic genes enabled reaching a final production of 7.3 mg/g(DCW) in shake flask cultures and batch bioreactors, which is the highest yield of microbially produced violaxanthin reported to date.

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