4.6 Article

Increasing Acid Tolerance of an Engineered Lactic Acid Bacterium Pediococcus acidilactici for L-Lactic Acid Production

Journal

FERMENTATION-BASEL
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/fermentation8030096

Keywords

acid tolerance; lactic acid bacterium (LAB); adaptive evolution; metabolic engineering; wheat straw

Funding

  1. [31961133006]
  2. [21978083]

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This study aimed to enhance the acid tolerance of an engineered Pediococcus acidilactici strain using metabolic modification and adaptive evolution approaches. While overexpression of certain genes did not show significant improvement, low pH adaptive evolution resulted in clear enhancement. However, further decrease in pH led to a dramatic reduction in L-lactic acid generation.
Acid tolerance of the lactic acid bacterium (LAB) is crucially important for the production of free lactic acid as a chemical monomer by simplified purification steps. This study conducts both metabolic modification and adaptive evolution approaches on increasing the acid tolerance of an engineered Pediococcus acidilactici strain. The overexpression of the genes encoding lactate dehydrogenase, recombinase, chaperone, glutathione and ATPase did not show the observable changes in acid tolerance. On the other hand, the low pH adaptive evolution showed clear improvement. The L-lactic acid generation and cell viability of the adaptively evolved P. acidilactici were doubled at low pH up to 4.0 when wheat straw was used as carbohydrate feedstock. However, the further decrease in pH value close to the pKa (3.86) of lactic acid led to a dramatic reduction in L-lactic acid generation. This result shows a partially successful approach on improving the acid tolerance of the lactic acid bacterium P. acidilactici.

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