Lignocellulose (dry plant biomass) is an abundant cheap inedible residue of agriculture and wood industry with great potential as a feedstock for biotechnological processes. Lignocellulosic substrates can serve as valuable resources in fermentation processes, allowing the production of a wide array of chemicals, fuels, and food additives. The main obstacle for cost-effective conversion of lignocellulosic hydrolysates to target products is poor metabolism of the major pentoses, xylose and L-arabinose, which are the second and third most abundant sugars of lignocellulose after glucose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlavin mononucleotide (FMN, riboflavin-5'-phosphate) is flavin coenzyme synthesized in all living organisms from riboflavin (vitamin B ) after phosphorylation in the reaction catalyzed by riboflavin kinase. FMN has several applications mostly as yellow colorant in food industry due to 200 times better water solubility as compared to riboflavin. Currently, FMN is produced by chemical phosphorylation of riboflavin, however, final product contains up to 25% of flavin impurities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Riboflavin is a precursor of FMN and FAD which act as coenzymes of numerous enzymes. Riboflavin is an important biotechnological commodity with annual market sales exceeding nine billion US dollars. It is used primarily as a component of feed premixes, a food colorant, a component of multivitamin mixtures and medicines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany microorganisms are capable of riboflavin oversynthesis and accumulation in a medium, suggesting that they efficiently excrete riboflavin. The mechanisms of riboflavin efflux in microorganisms remain elusive. Candida famata are representatives of a group of so-called flavinogenic yeast species that overproduce riboflavin (vitamin B) in response to iron limitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe approaches used by the authors to design the Candida famata strains capable to overproduce riboflavin, flavin mononucleotide (FMN), and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) are described. The metabolic engineering approaches include overexpression of SEF1 gene encoding positive regulator of riboflavin biosynthesis, IMH3 (coding for IMP dehydrogenase) orthologs from another species of flavinogenic yeast Debaryomyces hansenii, and the homologous genes RIB1 and RIB7 encoding GTP cyclohydrolase II and riboflavin synthase, the first and the last enzymes of riboflavin biosynthesis pathway, respectively. Overexpression of the above mentioned genes in the genetically stable riboflavin overproducer AF-4 obtained by classical selection resulted in fourfold increase of riboflavin production in shake flask experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ind Microbiol Biotechnol
May 2014
Flavins in the form of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) play an important role in metabolism as cofactors for oxidoreductases and other enzymes. Flavin nucleotides have applications in the food industry and medicine; FAD supplements have been efficiently used for treatment of some inheritable diseases. FAD is produced biotechnologically; however, this compound is much more expensive than riboflavin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIron deficiency causes oversynthesis of riboflavin in several yeast species, known as flavinogenic yeasts. Under iron deprivation conditions, Pichia guilliermondii cells increase production of riboflavin and malondialdehyde and the formation of protein carbonyl groups, which reflect increased intracellular content of reactive oxygen species. In this study, we found that P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPichia guilliermondii is a representative of a group of so-called flavinogenic yeast species that overproduce riboflavin (vitamin B(2)) in response to iron limitation. Using insertion mutagenesis, we isolated P. guilliermondii mutants overproducing riboflavin.
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