Discovery and implementation of a novel pathway for n-butanol production via 2-oxoglutarate
Journal article, 2019

Background: One of the European Union directives indicates that 10% of all fuels must be bio-synthesized by 2020. In this regard, biobutanol - natively produced by clostridial strains - poses as a promising alternative biofuel. One possible approach to overcome the difficulties of the industrial exploration of the native producers is the expression of more suitable pathways in robust microorganisms such as Escherichia coli. The enumeration of novel pathways is a powerful tool, allowing to identify non-obvious combinations of enzymes to produce a target compound.

Results: This work describes the in silico driven design of E. coli strains able to produce butanol via 2-oxoglutarate by a novel pathway. This butanol pathway was generated by a hypergraph algorithm and selected from an initial set of 105,954 different routes by successively applying different filters, such as stoichiometric feasibility, size and novelty. The implementation of this pathway involved seven catalytic steps and required the insertion of nine heterologous genes from various sources in E. coli distributed in three plasmids. Expressing butanol genes in E. coli K12 and cultivation in High-Density Medium formulation seem to favor butanol accumulation via the 2-oxoglutarate pathway. The maximum butanol titer obtained was 85 ± 1 mg L-1 by cultivating the cells in bioreactors.

Conclusions: In this work, we were able to successfully translate the computational analysis into in vivo applications, designing novel strains of E. coli able to produce n-butanol via an innovative pathway. Our results demonstrate that enumeration algorithms can broad the spectrum of butanol producing pathways. This validation encourages further research to other target compounds.

2-Oxoglutarate

E. coli

n-Butanol

Metabolic engineering

Enumeration algorithms

Author

Sofia Ferreira

University of Minho

Rui Pereira

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

SilicoLife Lda

Filipe Liu

Argonne National Laboratory

University of Minho

P. Vilaca

SilicoLife Lda

I. Rocha

University of Minho

Nova University of Lisbon

Biotechnology for Biofuels

17546834 (ISSN) 1754-6834 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 1 230

Subject Categories

Bioprocess Technology

Microbiology

Bioinformatics and Systems Biology

DOI

10.1186/s13068-019-1565-x

More information

Latest update

11/11/2019