AI Article Synopsis

  • α-Santalene is a natural compound with various health benefits, and advances in metabolic engineering allow for its production in non-native organisms.
  • Researchers optimized a synthetic operon by manipulating ribosome binding sites (RBSs) in a specific strain, resulting in α-santalene production reaching 412 mg·L.
  • The study found that reducing competition from indole-related pathways could significantly enhance α-santalene yields, with a deletion leading to a production increase of 599 mg·L.

Article Abstract

α-Santalene belongs to a class of natural compounds with many physiological functions and medical applications. Advances in metabolic engineering enable non-native hosts (e.g., ) to produce α-santalene, the precursor of sandalwood oil. However, imbalances in enzymatic activity often result in a metabolic burden on hosts and repress the synthetic capacity of the desired product. In this work, we manipulated ribosome binding sites (RBSs) to optimize an α-santalene synthetic operon in , and the best engineered NA-IS strain could produce α-santalene at a titer of 412 mg·L. Concerning the observation of the inverse correlation between indole synthesis and α-santalene production, this study speculated that indole-associated amino acid metabolism would be competitive to the synthesis of α-santalene rather than indole toxicity itself. The deletion of could lead to a 1.5-fold increase in α-santalene production to a titer of 599 mg·L in NA-IS. Our results suggested that the optimization of RBS sets of the synthetic module and attenuation of the competitive pathway are promising approaches for improving the production of terpenoids including α-santalene.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.1c05486DOI Listing

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