Metabolic engineering of Bacillus subtilis for l-valine overproduction

Citation:

Westbrook, A. W. , Ren, X. , Moo-Young, M. , & Chou, C. P. . (2018). Metabolic engineering of Bacillus subtilis for l-valine overproduction. Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 115, 2778-2792.

Abstract:

Bacillus subtilis has been commonly applied to industrial enzyme production due to its genetic tractability, generally recognized as safe (GRAS) status, and robust growth characteristics. In spite of its ideal attributes as a biomanufacturing platform, B. subtilis has seen limited use in the production of other value-added biochemicals. Here, we report the derivation of engineered strains of B. subtilis for l-valine overproduction using our recently developed CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced palindromic repeats)-Cas9 (CRISPR-associated [protein] 9) toolkit. We first manipulate the native l-valine biosynthetic pathway by relieving transcriptional and allosteric regulation, resulting in a >14-fold increase in the l-valine titer, compared to the wild-type strain. We subsequently identify and eliminate factors limiting l-valine overproduction, specifically increasing pyruvate availability and blocking the competing l-leucine and l-isoleucine biosynthetic pathways. By inactivating (a) pdhA, encoding the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, to increase the intracellular pyruvate pool, and (b) leuA and ilvA, respectively encoding 2-isopropylmalate synthase and l-threonine dehydratase, to abolish the competing pathways, the l-valine titer reached 4.61g/L in shake flask cultures. Our engineered l-valine-overproducing strains of B. subtilis are devoid of plasmids and do not sporulate due to the inactivation of sigF, encoding the sporulation-specific transcription factor sigma(F), making them attractive for large-scale l-valine production. However, acetate dissimilation was identified as limiting l-valine overproduction in pdhA B. subtilis strains, and improving acetate dissimilation or identifying alternate modes of increasing pyruvate pools to enhance l-valine-overproduction should be explored.

Notes:

Westbrook, Adam W. Ren, Xiang Moo-Young, Murray Chou, C. Perry

Last updated on 10/17/2019