4.7 Article

Improved Production of Malic Acid in Aspergillus niger by Abolishing Citric Acid Accumulation and Enhancing Glycolytic Flux

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 1418-1425

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.0c00096

Keywords

Aspergillus niger; L-malic acid; sugar transporter; glycolytic pathway; metabolic engineering

Funding

  1. Tianjin Science and Technology Committee [18YFZCSY01360]
  2. program of Distinguished Professor of Tianjin Education Commission [10259]

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Microbial fermentation was widely explored to produce malic acid. Previously, Aspergillus niger has been successfully engineered, and a high titer of malic acid was achieved with strain S575, but it also produced a high level of byproduct citric acid. Here, the capability of A. niger in malic acid biosynthesis was further improved by eliminating the accumulation of citric acid and enhancing glycolytic flux. Characterization of variant mutants suggested that disruption of cexA, a gene encoding citric acid transporter located on cell membrane, abolished citric acid accumulation. However, cexA-deficient strain 5895 showed significantly decreased malic add production. Further analysis of 5895 indicated that the transcription level of genes involved in glucose transportation and glycolytic pathway was significantly reduced, and the corresponding enzyme activity was also lower than those of S575. Individual overexpression of genes encoding glucose transporter MstC and key enzymes (hexokinase HxkA, 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase PfkA, and pyruvate kinase PkiA) involved in irreversible reactions of glycolic pathway increased malic acid production. Accordingly, genes of mstC, hxkA, pfkA, and pkiA were overexpressed altogether in 5895, and the resultant strain 51149 was constructed. The titer of malic acid in fed-batch fermentation with 51149 reached 201.13 g/L. Compared with 5575, the byproduct of citric acid was completely abolished in S1149, and the ratio of malic acid/glucose was increased from 1.27 to 1.64 mol/mol, the highest yield reported so far, and the fermentation period was shortened from 9 to 8 days. Thus, a strain with great industrial application potential was developed by engineering nine genes in A. niger, and a pilot fermentation technology was exploited.

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