4.7 Article

The potential of caproate (hexanoate) production using Clostridium kluyveri syntrophic cocultures with Clostridium acetobutylicum or Clostridium saccharolyticum

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2022.965614

Keywords

coculture (co-culture); Clostridium kluyveri; Clostridium saccharolyticum; Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824; chain elongation; caproate; hexanoate; Lacrimispora saccharolytica

Funding

  1. United States Department of Energy
  2. NIH-NIGMS [DE-SC0019155]
  3. State of Delaware [P20 GM103446, P20 GM139760]

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The research demonstrates that Clostridium kluyveri can perform chain elongation to produce caproate from short chain alcohols and carboxylic acids, with significantly improved production efficiency and yield in coculture. Furthermore, exploring novel coculture partners can lead to higher caproate titers, showcasing the potential of coculture biotechnology for sustainable production of caproate and other platform chemicals.
Caproate (hexanoate) and other medium-chain fatty acids are valuable platform chemicals produced by processes utilizing petroleum or plant oil. Clostridium kluyveri, growing on short chain alcohols (notably ethanol) and carboxylic acids (such as acetate) is noted for its ability to perform chain elongation to produce 4- to 8-carbon carboxylates. C. kluyveri has been studied in monoculture and coculture conditions, which lead to relatively modest carboxylate titers after long fermentation times. To assess the biosynthetic potential of C. kluyveri for caproate production from sugars through coculture fermentations, in the absence of monoculture data in the literature suitable for our coculture experiments, we first explored C. kluyveri monocultures. Some monocultures achieved caproate titers of 150 to over 200 mM in 40-50 h with a production rate of 7.9 mM/h. Based on that data, we then explored two novel, syntrophic coculture partners for producing caproate from sugars: Clostridium acetobutylicum and Clostridium saccharolyticum. Neither species has been cocultured with C. kluyveri before, and both demonstrate promising results. Our experiments of C. kluyveri monocultures and C. kluyveri-C. saccharolyticum cocultures demonstrate exceptionally high caproate titers (145-200 mM), fast production rates (3.25-8.1 mM/h), and short fermentation times (18-45 h). These results represent the most caproate produced by a C. kluyveri coculture in the shortest known fermentation time. We also explored the possibility of heterologous cell fusion between the coculture pairs similar to the results seen previously in our group with C. acetobutylicum and Clostridium ljungdahlii. Fusion events were observed only in the C. acetobutylicum-C. kluyveri coculture pair, and we offer an explanation for the lack of fusion between C. saccharolyticum and C. kluyveri. This work supports the promise of coculture biotechnology for sustainable production of caproate and other platform chemicals.

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