4.8 Article

Conversion of CO2 into organic acids by engineered autotrophic yeast

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2211827119

关键词

synthetic biology; metabolic engineering; carbon capture; organic acids; yeast

资金

  1. Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs
  2. Federal Ministry for Climate Action, Environment, Energy Mobility, Innovation and Technology
  3. Styrian Business Promotion Agency SFG
  4. Standortagentur Tirol
  5. Government of Lower Austria
  6. ZIT -Technology Agency of the City of Vienna through the COMET Funding Program
  7. Austrian Science Fund [FWF W1224, FWF M2891]
  8. VIVALDI project from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [101000441]
  9. EQ-BOKU VIBT GmbH
  10. BOKU Core Facility Mass Spectrometry

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The increase of CO2 emissions is one of the main causes of the current climate crisis. Utilizing CO2 as a feedstock for chemical synthesis is important for establishing industrial processes independent of agricultural resources.
The increase of CO2 emissions due to human activity is one of the preeminent reasons for the present climate crisis. In addition, considering the increasing demand for renewable resources, the upcycling of CO2 as a feedstock gains an extensive importance to establish CO2-neutral or CO2-negative industrial processes independent of agricultural resources. Here we assess whether synthetic autotrophic Komagataella phaffii (Pichia pastoris) can be used as a platform for value-added chemicals using CO2 as a feedstock by integrating the heterologous genes for lactic and itaconic acid synthesis. 13C labeling experiments proved that the resulting strains are able to produce organic acids via the assimilation of CO2 as a sole carbon source. Further engineering attempts to prevent the lactic acid consumption increased the titers to 600 mg L-1, while balancing the expression of key genes and modifying screening conditions led to 2 g L-1 itaconic acid. Bioreactor cultivations suggest that a fine-tuning on CO2 uptake and oxygen demand of the cells is essential to reach a higher productivity. We believe that through further metabolic and process engineering, the resulting engineered strain can become a promising host for the production of value-added bulk chemicals by microbial assimilation of CO2, to support sustainability of industrial bioprocesses.

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