4.7 Article

C1 compounds as auxiliary substrate for engineered Pseudomonas putida S12

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue 4, Pages 705-713

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-009-1922-y

Keywords

Pseudomonas putida; Auxiliary substrate; C-1 compounds

Funding

  1. Netherlands Ministry of Economic Affairs
  2. B-Basic partner organizations
  3. public-private NWO-ACTS program
  4. Kluyver Center for Genomics of Industrial Fermentation

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The solvent-tolerant bacterium Pseudomonas putida S12 was engineered to efficiently utilize the C-1 compounds methanol and formaldehyde as auxiliary substrate. The hps and phi genes of Bacillus brevis, encoding two key steps of the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) pathway, were introduced to construct a pathway for the metabolism of the toxic methanol oxidation intermediate formaldehyde. This approach resulted in a remarkably increased biomass yield on the primary substrate glucose when cultured in C-limited chemostats fed with a mixture of glucose and formaldehyde. With increasing relative formaldehyde feed concentrations, the biomass yield increased from 35% (C-mol biomass/C-mol glucose) without formaldehyde to 91% at 60% relative formaldehyde concentration. The RuMP-pathway expressing strain was also capable of growing to higher relative formaldehyde concentrations than the control strain. The presence of an endogenous methanol oxidizing enzyme activity in P. putida S12 allowed the replacement of formaldehyde with the less toxic methanol, resulting in an 84% (C-mol/C-mol) biomass yield. Thus, by introducing two enzymes of the RuMP pathway, co-utilization of the cheap and renewable substrate methanol was achieved, making an important contribution to the efficient use of P. putida S12 as a bioconversion platform host.

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