4.3 Article

Enhanced Direct Ethanol Production by Cofactor Optimization of Cell Surface-Displayed Xylose Isomerase in Yeast

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 1068-1076

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/btpr.2478

Keywords

bioethanol; xylan; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; xylose isomerase; metal cation

Funding

  1. JST, CREST
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [15J01303]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15J01303, 17J07458] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Xylose isomerase (XylC) from Clostridium cellulovorans can simultaneously perform isomerization and fermentation of D-xylose, the main component of lignocellulosic biomass, and is an attractive candidate enzyme. In this study, we optimized a specified metal cation in a previously established Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain displaying XylC. We investigated the effect of each metal cation on the catalytic function of the XylC-displaying S. cerevisiae. Results showed that the divalent cobalt cations (Co2+) especially enhanced the activity by 46-fold. Co2+ also contributed to D-xylose fermentation, which resulted in improving ethanol yields and xylose consumption rates by 6.0- and 2.7-fold, respectively. Utility of the extracellular xylose isomerization system was exhibited in the presence of mixed sugar. XylC-displaying yeast showed the faster D-xylose uptake than the yeast producing XI intracellularly. Furthermore, direct xylan saccharification and fermentation was performed by unique yeast co-culture system. A xylan-degrading yeast strain was established by displaying two kinds of xylanases; endo-1,4-beta-xylanase (Xyn11B) from Saccharophagus degradans, and b-xylosidase (XlnD) from Aspergillus niger. The yeast co-culture system enabled fine-tuning of the initial ratios of the displayed enzymes (Xyn11B:XlnD:XylC) by adjusting the inoculation ratios of Xylanases (Xyn11B and XlnD)-displaying yeast and XylC-displaying yeast. When the enzymes were inoculated at the ratio of 1:1:2 (1.39 x 10(13) : 1.39 x 10(13) : 2.78 x 10(13) molecules), 6.0 g/L ethanol was produced from xylan. Thus, the cofactor optimization and the yeast co-culture system developed in this study could expand the prospect of biofuels production from lignocellulosic biomass. (C) 2017 American Institute of Chemical Engineers

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