A yarrowia lipolytica strain engineered for pyomelanin production

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Abstract

The yeast Yarrowia lipolytica naturally produces pyomelanin. This pigment accumulates in the extracellular environment following the autoxidation and polymerization of homogentisic acid, a metabolite derived from aromatic amino acids. In this study, we used a chassis strain optimized to produce aromatic amino acids for the de novo overproduction of pyomelanin. The gene 4HPPD, which encodes an enzyme involved in homogentisic acid synthesis (4‐hydroxyphenylpyruvic acid dioxygenase), was characterized and overexpressed in the chassis strain with up to three copies, leading to pyomelanin yields of 4.5 g/L. Homogentisic acid is derived from tyrosine. When engineered strains were grown in a phenylalanine‐supplemented medium, pyomelanin production increased, revealing that the yeast could convert phenylalanine to tyrosine, or that the homogentisic acid pathway is strongly induced by phenylalanine.

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APA

Larroude, M., Onésime, D., Rué, O., Nicaud, J. M., & Rossignol, T. (2021). A yarrowia lipolytica strain engineered for pyomelanin production. Microorganisms, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9040838

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