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Investigating E. coli Coculture for Resveratrol Production with C-13 Metabolic Flux Analysis

Authors
Hong, JaeseungIm, Dae-KyunOh, Min-Kyu
Issue Date
18-3월-2020
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Keywords
resveratrol; E. coli; metabolic engineering; coculture; C-13-MFA
Citation
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, v.68, no.11, pp.3466 - 3473
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume
68
Number
11
Start Page
3466
End Page
3473
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/57253
DOI
10.1021/acs.jafc.9b07628
ISSN
0021-8561
Abstract
Resveratrol, a phytoalexin produced by plants, has several beneficial effects in humans. It can be produced using Escherichia coli by introducing only three heterologous genes: TAL, 4CL, and STS. However, the resveratrol synthesis pathway requires two precursors, tyrosine and acetyl-CoA, which are produced by two branched central metabolic pathways. Therefore, overexpression of these genes in E. coli results in the production of only trace amounts of resveratrol. In this study, we attempted to produce resveratrol via coculture of two engineered strains in which the two metabolic pathways are activated. The first strain was engineered to produce p-coumaric acid using tyrosine as a precursor, which can be synthesized by the pentose phosphate pathway. The second strain produced resveratrol by combining p-coumaric acid from the first strain and malonyl-CoA synthesized from acetyl-CoA, which is produced by the glycolytic pathway. In total, 55.7 mg/L of resveratrol was produced from 20 g/L of glucose via coculture of these two strains in glucose minimal medium without any supplements. The metabolic fluxes in each of the strains producing resveratrol were successfully investigated by C-13 metabolic flux analysis. The results showed that the balance between the citric acid cycle and the malonyl-CoA supply node was important for resveratrol production.
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