Cyanobacteria can grow photoautotrophically, producing a range of substances by absorbing sunlight and utilizing carbon dioxide, and can potentially be used as industrial microbes that have minimal sugar requirements. To evaluate this potential, we explored the possibility of l-glutamate production using the Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. The ybjL gene encoding the putative l-glutamate exporter from Escherichia coli was introduced, and l-glutamate production reached 2.3 g/L in 143 h (34°C, 100 μmol m s). Then, we attempted to produce two flavor substances, (S)-linalool, a monoterpene alcohol, and the sesquiterpene (+)-valencene. The Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 strain in which the linalool synthase gene (LINS) from Actinidia arguta (AaLINS) was expressed under control of the tac promoter (GT0846K-P-AaLINS) produced 11.4 mg/L (S)-linalool in 160 h (30°C, 50 μmol m s). The strain in which AaLINS2 and the mutated farnesyl diphosphate synthase gene ispA∗ (S80F) from E. coli (GT0846K-P-AaLINS-ispA∗) were expressed from the P promoter accumulated 11.6 mg/L (S)-linalool in 160 h. Genome analysis revealed that both strains had mutations in slr1270, suggesting that loss of Slr1270 function was necessary for high linalool accumulation. For sesquiterpene production, the valencene synthase gene from Callitropsis nootkatensis and the fernesyl diphosphate synthase (ispA) gene from E. coli were introduced, and the resultant strain produced 9.6 mg/L of (+)-valencene in 166 h (30°C, 50 μmol m s). This study highlights the production efficiency of engineered cyanobacteria, providing insight into potential industrial applications.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiosc.2020.06.013DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

synechocystis pcc6803
12
synthase gene
12
+-valencene synechocystis
8
l-glutamate production
8
s-linalool 160 h
8
30°c 50 μmol m s
8
diphosphate synthase
8
production
5
gene
5
production glutamate
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!