Flux through Citrate Synthase Limits the Growth of EthanologenicEscherichia coliKO11 during Xylose Fermentation
Open Access
- 1 March 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 68 (3) , 1071-1081
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.68.3.1071-1081.2002
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that high levels of complex nutrients (Luria broth or 5% corn steep liquor) were necessary for rapid ethanol production by the ethanologenic strain Escherichia coli KO11. Although this strain is prototrophic, cell density and ethanol production remained low in mineral salts media (10% xylose) unless complex nutrients were added. The basis for this nutrient requirement was identified as a regulatory problem created by metabolic engineering of an ethanol pathway. Cells must partition pyruvate between competing needs for biosynthesis and regeneration of NAD+. Expression of low-Km Zymomonas mobilis pdc (pyruvate decarboxylase) in KO11 reduced the flow of pyruvate carbon into native fermentation pathways as desired, but it also restricted the flow of carbon skeletons into the 2-ketoglutarate arm of the tricarboxylic acid pathway (biosynthesis). In mineral salts medium containing 1% corn steep liquor and 10% xylose, the detrimental effect of metabolic engineering was substantially reduced by addition of pyruvate. A similar benefit was also observed when acetaldehyde, 2-ketoglutarate, or glutamate was added. In E. coli, citrate synthase links the cellular abundance of NADH to the supply of 2-ketoglutarate for glutamate biosynthesis. This enzyme is allosterically regulated and inhibited by high NADH concentrations. In addition, citrate synthase catalyzes the first committed step in 2-ketoglutarate synthesis. Oxidation of NADH by added acetaldehyde (or pyruvate) would be expected to increase the activity of E. coli citrate synthase and direct more carbon into 2-ketoglutarate, and this may explain the stimulation of growth. This hypothesis was tested, in part, by cloning the Bacillus subtilis citZ gene encoding an NADH-insensitive citrate synthase. Expression of recombinant citZ in KO11 was accompanied by increases in cell growth and ethanol production, which substantially reduced the need for complex nutrients.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- Engineering a Homo-Ethanol Pathway in Escherichia coli : Increased Glycolytic Flux and Levels of Expression of Glycolytic Genes during Xylose FermentationJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- The Effects of Feed and Intracellular Pyruvate Levels on the Redistribution of Metabolic Fluxes in Escherichia coliMetabolic Engineering, 2001
- Redistribution of Metabolic Fluxes inEscherichia coliwith Fermentative Lactate Dehydrogenase Overexpression and DeletionMetabolic Engineering, 1999
- Biosynthetic Burden and Plasmid Burden Limit Expression of Chromosomally Integrated Heterologous Genes (pdc,adhB) in EscherichiacoliBiotechnology Progress, 1999
- Flux Adaptations of Citrate Synthase—deficient Escherichia coliaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Study of Nitrate Metabolism of Escherichia coli Using FluorescenceBiotechnology Progress, 1994
- Kinetics and specificity of reductive acylation of lipoyl domains from 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase multienzyme complexesBiochemistry, 1989
- Why a Co-substrate is Required for Anaerobic Growth of Escherichia coli on CitrateMicrobiology, 1980
- Escherichia coli citrate synthase. Purification and the effect of potassium on some propertiesBiochemistry, 1969
- Biochemical and Genetic Studies with Lysine + Methionine Mutants of Escherichia coli: Lipoic Acid and -Ketoglutarate Dehydrogenase-less MutantsJournal of General Microbiology, 1968