AI Article Synopsis

  • * Engineering microorganisms to efficiently produce aldehydes provides a sustainable method for creating chemical precursors and their derivatives.
  • * Researchers successfully improved aldehyde production by modifying enzymes and removing competing pathways, leading to the highest reported production levels of aliphatic aldehydes and alkenes/alkanes in this field.

Article Abstract

Aldehydes are a class of highly versatile chemicals that can undergo a wide range of chemical reactions and are in high demand as starting materials for chemical manufacturing. Biologically, fatty aldehydes can be produced from fatty acyl-CoA by the action of fatty acyl-CoA reductases. The aldehydes produced can be further converted enzymatically to other valuable derivatives. Thus, metabolic engineering of microorganisms for biosynthesizing aldehydes and their derivatives could provide an economical and sustainable platform for key aldehyde precursor production and subsequent conversion to various value-added chemicals. is an excellent host for this purpose because it is a robust organism that has been used extensively for industrial biochemical production. However, fatty acyl-CoA-dependent aldehyde-forming enzymes expressed in thus far have extremely low activities, hence limiting direct utilization of fatty acyl-CoA as substrate for aldehyde biosynthesis. Toward overcoming this challenge, we successfully engineered an alcohol-forming fatty acyl-CoA reductase for aldehyde production through rational design. We further improved aldehyde production through strain engineering by deleting competing pathways and increasing substrate availability. Subsequently, we demonstrated alkane and alkene production as one of the many possible applications of the aldehyde-producing strain. Overall, by protein engineering of a fatty acyl-CoA reductase to alter its activity and metabolic engineering of , we generated strains with the highest reported cytosolic aliphatic aldehyde and alkane/alkene production to date in from fatty acyl-CoA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7573125PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2020.585935DOI Listing

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