Keywords
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metabolic engineering, succinic acid, SDH1, Yarrowia lipolytica, fed-batch fermentation
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Abstract
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Oleaginous yeast Yarrowia lipolytica is a prospective host for production of succinic acid.
The interruption of tricarboxylic acid cycle through succinate dehydrogenase gene (SDH)
deletion was reported to result in strains incapable of glucose utilization and this ability
had to be restored by chemical mutation or long adaptive laboratory evolution. In this
study, a succinate producing strain of Y. lipolytica was engineered by truncating the
promoter of SDH1 gene, which resulted in 77% reduction in SDH activity but did not
impair the ability of the strain to grow on glucose. The flux toward succinic acid was
further improved by overexpressing the genes in the glyoxylate pathway and the oxidative
TCA branch, and expressing phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from Actinobacillus
succinogenes. A short adaptation on glucose reduced the lag phase of the strain and
increased its tolerance to high glucose concentrations. The resulting strain produced 7.8
± 0.0 g/L succinic acid with a yield of 0.105 g/g glucose in shake flasks without pH
control, while mannitol (11.8 ± 0.8 g/L) was the main by-product. Further investigations
showed that mannitol accumulation was caused by low pH stress and buffering the
fermentation medium eliminated mannitol formation. In a fed-batch bioreactor in mineral
mediumat pH 5, at which point according to Ka values of succinic acid, themajor fraction
of product was in acidic form rather than dissociated form, the strain produced 35.3 ±
1.5 g/L succinic acid with 0.26 ± 0.00 g/g glucose yield.
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