Shikimate Metabolic Pathway Engineering in Corynebacterium glutamicum

  • Park, Eunhwi
  • Kim, Hye-Jin
  • Seo, Seung-Yeul
  • Lee, Han-Na
  • Choi, Si-Sun
  • ... Kim, Eung-Soo
  • 외 1명
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초록

Shikimate is a key high-demand metabolite for synthesizing valuable antiviral drugs, such as the anti-influenza drug, oseltamivir (Tamiflu). Microbial-based strategies for shikimate production have been developed to overcome the unstable and expensive supply of shikimate derived from traditional plant extraction processes. In this study, a microbial cell factory using Corynebacterium glutamicum was designed to overproduce shikimate in a fed-batch culture system. First, the shikimate kinase gene (aroK) responsible for converting shikimate to the next step was disrupted to facilitate the accumulation of shikimate. Several genes encoding the shikimate bypass route, such as dehydroshikimate dehydratase (QsuB), pyruvate kinase (Pyk1), and quinate/shikimate dehydrogenase (QsuD), were disrupted sequentially. An artificial operon containing several shikimate pathway genes, including aroE, aroB, aroF, and aroG were overexpressed to maximize the glucose uptake and intermediate flux. The rationally designed shikimate-overproducing C. glutamicum strain grown in an optimized medium produced approximately 37.3 g/l of shikimate in 7-L fed-batch fermentation. Overall, rational cell factory design and culture process optimization for the microbial-based production of shikimate will play a key role in complementing traditional plant-derived shikimate production processes.

키워드

Shikimatemetabolic pathway engineeringCorynebacteriumgenome editingfed-batch fermentation
제목
Shikimate Metabolic Pathway Engineering in Corynebacterium glutamicum
저자
Park, EunhwiKim, Hye-JinSeo, Seung-YeulLee, Han-NaChoi, Si-SunLee, Sang JoungKim, Eung-Soo
DOI
10.4014/jmb.2106.06009
발행일
2021-09
유형
Article
저널명
Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
31
9
페이지
1305 ~ 1310