Hyperproduction of L-threonine by an escherichia coli mutant with impaired L-threonine uptake

53Citations
Citations of this article
14Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

An efficient production strain for L-threonine fermentation was derived from Escherichia coli by multiple rounds of mutation programs that aimed at deregulation of the L-threonine biosynthetic pathway and blocking of L-threonine degradation pathways. When the optimum amount of DL-methionine was added, this strain KYI0935, an L-methionine auxotroph, gave 100g/liter L-threonine after 77 h cultivation. In this strain, key enzymes in the L-threonine biosynthetic pathway were highly derepressed, but some were inhibited by lower concentrations of L-threonine than the accumulated level. Such incomplete deregulation of the pathway was accounted for by the intracellular concentration of L-threonine being lower than the extracellular level. In an assessment of L-threonine transport in terms of phenotypic growth responses to the amino acid, L-threonine-auxotrophic mutants with a lesion in the L-threonine operon were derived from strain KY10935 by selection for auxotrophy for dipeptide L-alanyl-L-threonine or glycyl-L-threonine, the transport systems of which were different from those of L-threonine. All three independent mutants isolated needed an extraordinarily high concentration (10mg/ml) of L-threonine, but grew in the presence of a low concentration (10 μg/ml) of either dipeptide, indicating that strain KY10935 had impaired L-threonine uptake. These results suggested that the strain had an unusual mechanism of L-threonine hyperproduction: the inability to take up L-threonine that had accumulated extracellularly decreased the steady-state level of intracellular L-threonine, freeing the remaining regulatory steps of feedback inhibition. © 1997, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Okamoto, K., Kino, K., & Ikeda, M. (1997). Hyperproduction of L-threonine by an escherichia coli mutant with impaired L-threonine uptake. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 61(11), 1877–1882. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.61.1877

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free