For metabolic engineering it is advantageous in terms of stability, genetic regulation, and metabolic burden to modulate expression of relevant genes on the chromosome rather than relying on over-expression of the genes on multi-copy vectors. Here we have increased the production of beta-carotene in Escherichia coli by replacing the native promoter of the chromosomal isoprenoid genes with the strong bacteriophage T5 promoter (P(T5)). We recombined PCR fragments with the lambda-Red recombinase to effect chromosomal promoter replacement, which allows direct integration of a promoter along with a selectable marker that can subsequently be excised by the Flp/FRT site-specific recombination system. The resulting promoter-engineered isoprenoid genes were combined by serial P1 transductions into a host strain harboring a reporter plasmid containing beta-carotene biosynthesis genes allowing a visual screen for yellow color indicative of beta-carotene accumulation. Construction of an E. coli P(T5)-dxs P(T5)-ispDispF P(T5)-idi P(T5)-ispB strain resulted in producing high titers (6mg/g dry cell weight) of beta-carotene. Surprisingly, over-expression of the ispB gene, which was expected to divert carbon flow from the isoprenoid pathway to quinone biosynthesis, resulted in increased beta-carotene production. We thus demonstrated that chromosomal promoter engineering of the endogenous isoprenoid pathway yielded high levels of beta-carotene in a non-carotenogenic E. coli. The high isoprenoid flux E. coli can be used as a starting strain to produce various carotenoids by introducing heterologous carotenoid genes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ymben.2005.08.005 | DOI Listing |
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