Engineering fungal de novo fatty acid synthesis for short chain fatty acid production

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Abstract

Fatty acids (FAs) are considered strategically important platform compounds that can be accessed by sustainable microbial approaches. Here we report the reprogramming of chain-length control of Saccharomyces cerevisiae fatty acid synthase (FAS). Aiming for short-chain FAs (SCFAs) producing baker's yeast, we perform a highly rational and minimally invasive protein engineering approach that leaves the molecular mechanisms of FASs unchanged. Finally, we identify five mutations that can turn baker's yeast into a SCFA producing system. Without any further pathway engineering, we achieve yields in extracellular concentrations of SCFAs, mainly hexanoic acid (C6-FA) and octanoic acid (C8-FA), of 464 mgl-1 in total. Furthermore, we succeed in the specific production of C6-or C8-FA in extracellular concentrations of 72 and 245 mgl-1, respectively. The presented technology is applicable far beyond baker's yeast, and can be plugged into essentially all currently available FA overproducing microorganisms.

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Gajewski, J., Pavlovic, R., Fischer, M., Boles, E., & Grininger, M. (2017). Engineering fungal de novo fatty acid synthesis for short chain fatty acid production. Nature Communications, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14650

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