• Title of article

    Engineered ketol-acid reductoisomerase and alcohol dehydrogenase enable anaerobic 2-methylpropan-1-ol production at theoretical yield in Escherichia coli

  • Author/Authors

    Bastian، نويسنده , , Sabine and Liu، نويسنده , , Xiang and Meyerowitz، نويسنده , , Joseph T. and Snow، نويسنده , , Christopher D. and Chen، نويسنده , , Mike M.Y. and Arnold، نويسنده , , Frances H.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    345
  • To page
    352
  • Abstract
    2-methylpropan-1-ol (isobutanol) is a leading candidate biofuel for the replacement or supplementation of current fossil fuels. Recent work has demonstrated glucose to isobutanol conversion through a modified amino acid pathway in a recombinant organism. Although anaerobic conditions are required for an economically competitive process, only aerobic isobutanol production has been feasible due to an imbalance in cofactor utilization. Two of the pathway enzymes, ketol-acid reductoisomerase and alcohol dehydrogenase, require nicotinamide dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH); glycolysis, however, produces only nicotinamide dinucleotide (NADH). Here, we compare two solutions to this imbalance problem: (1) over-expression of pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase PntAB and (2) construction of an NADH-dependent pathway, using engineered enzymes. We demonstrate that an NADH-dependent pathway enables anaerobic isobutanol production at 100% theoretical yield and at higher titer and productivity than both the NADPH-dependent pathway and transhydrogenase over-expressing strain. Our results show how engineering cofactor dependence can overcome a critical obstacle to next-generation biofuel commercialization.
  • Keywords
    biofuels , Metabolic engineering , Cofactor imbalance , Isobutanol , ketol-acid reductoisomerase
  • Journal title
    Metabolic Engineering
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Metabolic Engineering
  • Record number

    1429150