4.8 Article

Removal of lycopene substrate inhibition enables high carotenoid productivity in Yarrowia lipolytica

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28277-w

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0901800]
  2. DiSTAP Center of the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology

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This study reports the removal of lycopene substrate inhibition in Yarrowia lipolytica by two different strategies, resulting in high carotenoid productivity. The findings provide effective approaches for efficient synthesis of natural products.
Substrate inhibition has not been widely studied in the context of synthetic biology and metabolic engineering. Here, the authors report removal of lycopene substrate inhibition by two different strategies and enable high carotenoid productivity in Yarrowia lipolytica. Substrate inhibition of enzymes can be a major obstacle to the production of valuable chemicals in engineered microorganisms. Here, we show substrate inhibition of lycopene cyclase as the main limitation in carotenoid biosynthesis in Yarrowia lipolytica. To overcome this bottleneck, we exploit two independent approaches. Structure-guided protein engineering yields a variant, Y27R, characterized by complete loss of substrate inhibition without reduction of enzymatic activity. Alternatively, establishing a geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate synthase-mediated flux flow restrictor also prevents the onset of substrate inhibition by diverting metabolic flux away from the inhibitory metabolite while maintaining sufficient flux towards product formation. Both approaches result in high levels of near-exclusive beta-carotene production. Ultimately, we construct strains capable of producing 39.5 g/L beta-carotene at a productivity of 0.165 g/L/h in bioreactor fermentations (a 1441-fold improvement over the initial strain). Our findings provide effective approaches for removing substrate inhibition in engineering pathways for efficient synthesis of natural products.

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