Engineering cofactor supply and recycling to drive phenolic acid biosynthesis in yeast
Journal article, 2022

Advances in synthetic biology enable microbial hosts to synthesize valuable natural products in an efficient, cost-competitive and safe manner. However, current engineering endeavors focus mainly on enzyme engineering and pathway optimization, leaving the role of cofactors in microbial production of natural products and cofactor engineering largely ignored. Here we systematically engineered the supply and recycling of three cofactors (FADH2, S-adenosyl-l-methion and NADPH) in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, for high-level production of the phenolic acids caffeic acid and ferulic acid, the precursors of many pharmaceutical molecules. Tailored engineering strategies were developed for rewiring biosynthesis, compartmentalization and recycling of the cofactors, which enabled the highest production of caffeic acid (5.5 ± 0.2 g l−1) and ferulic acid (3.8 ± 0.3 g l−1) in microbial cell factories. These results demonstrate that cofactors play an essential role in driving natural product biosynthesis and the engineering strategies described here can be easily adopted for regulating the metabolism of other cofactors. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

Author

Ruibing Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Naval Medical University

Jiaoqi Gao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Wei Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Xianghui Chen

Naval Medical University

Shanghai University

Xiaoxin Zhai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Yu Chen

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Lei Zhang

Nantong University

Shanghai University

Naval Medical University

Yongjin Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Nature Chemical Biology

1552-4450 (ISSN) 1552-4469 (eISSN)

Vol. 18 5 520-529

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Other Mechanical Engineering

Microbiology

DOI

10.1038/s41589-022-01014-6

PubMed

35484257

More information

Latest update

5/9/2022 9