Publications by authors named "Shuai Tu"

Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers developed a de novo biosynthesis pathway of sakuranetin using genetically engineered yeast (S. cerevisiae), achieving a yield of 4.28 mg/L initially, which was later boosted to 50.62 mg/L through metabolic engineering strategies.
  • * This study marks the first successful attempt to synthesize sakuranetin directly from glucose in S. cerevisiae, with yields further increasing to 158.65 mg/L in larger bioreactor setups.
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Chlorogenic acid (CGA), a major dietary phenolic compound, has been increasingly used in the food and pharmaceutical industries because of its ready availability and extensive biological and pharmacological activities. Traditionally, extraction from plants has been the main approach for the commercial production of CGA. This study reports the first efficient microbial production of CGA by engineering the yeast, , on a simple mineral medium.

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Cofactor availability is often a rate-limiting factor in the bioconversion of xylose to xylitol. The overexpression of pentose phosphate pathway genes and the deletion of Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway genes can modulate the glucose metabolic flux and increase the intracellular NADPH supply, enabling cells to produce xylitol from corncob hydrolysates. The effects of and/or overexpression and , , and/or deletion on the intracellular redox environment and xylitol production were examined.

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The biotechnology-based production of xylitol has received widespread attention because it can use cheap and renewable lignocellulose as a raw material, thereby decreasing costs and pollution. The simultaneous use of various sugars in lignocellulose hydrolysates is a primary prerequisite for efficient xylitol production. In this study, a ΔptsG and crp* combinatorial strategy was used to generate Escherichia coli W3110 strain IS5-dI, which completely eliminated glucose repression and simultaneously used glucose and xylose.

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