Enhanced production of taxadiene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Author:

Nowrouzi Behnaz,Li Rachel A.,Walls Laura E.,d’Espaux Leo,Malcı Koray,Liang Lungang,Jonguitud-Borrego Nestor,Lerma-Escalera Albert I.,Morones-Ramirez Jose R.,Keasling Jay D.,Rios-Solis LeonardoORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Cost-effective production of the highly effective anti-cancer drug, paclitaxel (Taxol®), remains limited despite growing global demands. Low yields of the critical taxadiene precursor remains a key bottleneck in microbial production. In this study, the key challenge of poor taxadiene synthase (TASY) solubility in S. cerevisiae was revealed, and the strains were strategically engineered to relieve this bottleneck. Results Multi-copy chromosomal integration of TASY harbouring a selection of fusion solubility tags improved taxadiene titres 22-fold, up to 57 ± 3 mg/L at 30 °C at microscale, compared to expressing a single episomal copy of TASY. The scalability of the process was highlighted through achieving similar titres during scale up to 25 mL and 250 mL in shake flask and bioreactor cultivations, respectively at 20 and 30 °C. Maximum taxadiene titres of 129 ± 15 mg/L and 127 mg/L were achieved through shake flask and bioreactor cultivations, respectively, of the optimal strain at a reduced temperature of 20 °C. Conclusions The results of this study highlight the benefit of employing a combination of molecular biology and bioprocess tools during synthetic pathway development, with which TASY activity was successfully improved by 6.5-fold compared to the highest literature titre in S. cerevisiae cell factories.

Funder

Royal Society

The University of Edinburgh’s Principal Career development Scholarship

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

YLSY Program of the Ministry of National Education of the Republic of Turkey

University of Edinburgh Global Challenges Theme Development Fund

US National Science Foundation

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Bioengineering,Biotechnology

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