Affiliation:
1. Department of Agricultural and Life Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Shinshu University, Nagano, Japan
2. Bioprocess Development Center, Kyowa Hakko Bio Co., Ltd., Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
For fatty acid biosynthesis,
Corynebacterium glutamicum
uses two type I fatty acid synthases (FAS-I), FasA and FasB, in addition to acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase (ACC) consisting of AccBC, AccD1, and AccE. The
in vivo
roles of the enzymes in supplying precursors for biotin and α-lipoic acid remain unclear. Here, we report genetic evidence demonstrating that the biosynthesis of these cofactors is linked to fatty acid biosynthesis through the FAS-I pathway. For this study, we used wild-type
C. glutamicum
and its derived biotin vitamer producer BFI-5, which was engineered to express
Escherichia coli bioBF
and
Bacillus subtilis bioI
. Disruption of either
fasA
or
fasB
in strain BFI-5 led to decreased production of biotin vitamers, whereas its amplification contributed to increased production, with a larger impact of
fasA
in both cases. Double disruptions of
fasA
and
fasB
resulted in no biotin vitamer production. The
acc
genes showed a positive effect on production when amplified simultaneously. Augmented fatty acid biosynthesis was also reflected in pimelic acid production when carbon flow was blocked at the BioF reaction. These results indicate that carbon flow down the FAS-I pathway is destined for channeling into the biotin biosynthesis pathway, and that FasA in particular has a significant impact on precursor supply. In contrast,
fasB
disruption resulted in auxotrophy for lipoic acid or its precursor octanoic acid in both wild-type and BFI-5 strains. The phenotypes were fully complemented by plasmid-mediated expression of
fasB
but not
fasA
. These results reveal that FasB plays a specific physiological role in lipoic acid biosynthesis in
C. glutamicum
.
IMPORTANCE
For the
de novo
biosynthesis of fatty acids,
C. glutamicum
exceptionally uses a eukaryotic multifunctional type I fatty acid synthase (FAS-I) system comprising FasA and FasB, in contrast to most bacteria, such as
E. coli
and
B. subtilis
, which use an individual nonaggregating type II fatty acid synthase (FAS-II) system. In this study, we reported genetic evidence demonstrating that the FAS-I system is the source of the biotin precursor
in vivo
in the engineered biotin-prototrophic
C. glutamicum
strain. This study also uncovered the important physiological role of FasB in lipoic acid biosynthesis. Here, we present an FAS-I enzyme that functions in supplying the lipoic acid precursor, although its biosynthesis has been believed to exclusively depend on FAS-II in organisms. The findings obtained here provide new insights into the metabolic engineering of this industrially important microorganism to produce these compounds effectively.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
22 articles.
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