4.6 Article

Global Cellular Metabolic Rewiring Adapts Corynebacterium glutamicum to Efficient Nonnatural Xylose Utilization

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/aem.01518-22

Keywords

Corynebacterium glutamicum; xylose; synergistic effect; carbon catabolite repression; lignocellulosic biorefinery

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [19JCYBJC21100]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [TSBICIP-PTJS-001]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin [2018M641658]
  4. Tianjin Synthetic Biotechnology Innovation Capacity Improvement Project
  5. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
  6. [2021YFC2100700]
  7. [NSFC-21621004 and 32101186]

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A novel xylose regulatory mechanism mediated by the transcription factor IpsA was revealed, and a synergistic effect on carbon metabolism and energy supply was found to endow C. glutamicum with the efficient xylose utilization and rapid growth phenotype. This study not only provides promising C. glutamicum chassis strains for lignocellulosic biorefinery, but also enriches the understanding of xylose regulatory mechanism.
Xylose, the major component of lignocellulosic biomass, cannot be naturally or efficiently utilized by most microorganisms. Xylose (co)utilization is considered a cornerstone of efficient lignocellulose-based biomanufacturing. We evolved a rapidly xylose-utilizing strain, Cev2-18-5, which showed the highest reported specific growth rate (0.357 h(-1)) on xylose among plasmid-free Corynebacterium glutamicum strains. A genetically clear chassis strain, CGS15, was correspondingly reconstructed with an efficient glucose-xylose coutilization performance based on comparative genomic analysis and mutation reconstruction. With the introduction of a succinate-producing plasmid, the resulting strain, CGS15-SA1, can efficiently produce 97.1 g/L of succinate with an average productivity of 8.09 g/L/h by simultaneously utilizing glucose and xylose from corn stalk hydrolysate. We further revealed a novel xylose regulatory mechanism mediated by the endogenous transcription factor IpsA with global regulatory effects on C. glutamicum. A synergistic effect on carbon metabolism and energy supply, motivated by three genomic mutations (P-sod(C131T)-xylAB, P-tuf(Delta 21)-araE, and ipsA(C331T)), was found to endow C. glutamicum with the efficient xylose utilization and rapid growth phenotype. Overall, this work not only provides promising C. glutamicum chassis strains for a lignocellulosic biorefinery but also enriches the understanding of the xylose regulatory mechanism.IMPORTANCE A novel xylose regulatory mechanism mediated by the transcription factor IpsA was revealed. A synergistic effect on carbon metabolism and energy supply was found to endow C. glutamicum with the efficient xylose utilization and rapid growth phenotype. The new xylose regulatory mechanism enriches the understanding of nonnatural substrate metabolism and encourages exploration new engineering targets for rapid xylose utilization. This work also provides a paradigm to understand and engineer the metabolism of nonnatural renewable substrates for sustainable biomanufacturing. A novel xylose regulatory mechanism mediated by the transcription factor IpsA was revealed. A synergistic effect on carbon metabolism and energy supply was found to endow C. glutamicum with the efficient xylose utilization and rapid growth phenotype.

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