Tailoring strain construction strategies for muconic acid production in S. cerevisiae and E. coli

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Abstract

There is currently a strong interest to derive the biological precursor cis, cis-muconic acid from shikimate pathway-branches to develop a biological replacement for adipic acid. Pioneered by the Frost laboratory this concept has regained interest: Recent approaches (Boles, Alper, Yan) however suffer from low product titres. Here an in silico comparison of all strain construction strategies was conducted to highlight stoichiometric optimizations. Using elementary mode analysis new knock-out strategies were determined in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli. The strain construction strategies are unique to each pathway-branch and organism, allowing signicantly different maximum and minimum yields. The maximum theoretical product carbon yields on glucose ranged from 86% (dehydroshikimate-branch) to 69% (anthranilate-branch). In most cases a coupling of product formation to growth was possible. Especially in S. cerevisiae chorismate-routes a minimum yield constraint of 46.9% could be reached. The knock-out targets are non-obvious, and not-transferable, highlighting the importance of tailored strain construction strategies.

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Averesch, N. J. H., & Krömer, J. O. (2014). Tailoring strain construction strategies for muconic acid production in S. cerevisiae and E. coli. Metabolic Engineering Communications, 1(1), 19–28. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meteno.2014.09.001

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