Affiliation:
1. Microbial Physiology Group, Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences and Netherlands Institute for Systems Biology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2. Photanol B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Metabolic engineering of microorganisms has become a versatile tool to facilitate production of bulk chemicals, fuels, etc. Accordingly, CO
2
has been exploited via cyanobacterial metabolism as a sustainable carbon source of biofuel and bioplastic precursors. Here we extended these observations by showing that integration of an
ldh
gene from
Bacillus subtilis
(encoding an
l
-lactate dehydrogenase) into the genome of
Synechocystis
sp. strain PCC6803 leads to
l
-lactic acid production, a phenotype which is shown to be stable for prolonged batch culturing. Coexpression of a heterologous soluble transhydrogenase leads to an even higher lactate production rate and yield (lactic acid accumulating up to a several-millimolar concentration in the extracellular medium) than those for the single
ldh
mutant. The expression of a transhydrogenase alone, however, appears to be harmful to the cells, and a mutant carrying such a gene is rapidly outcompeted by a revertant(s) with a wild-type growth phenotype. Furthermore, our results indicate that the introduction of a lactate dehydrogenase rescues this phenotype by preventing the reversion.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
161 articles.
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