5 research outputs found

    Lactate tolerance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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    Applied Science

    Metabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for production of carboxylic acids: Current status and challenges

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    To meet the demands of future generations for chemicals and energy and to reduce the environmental footprint of the chemical industry, alternatives for petrochemistry are required. Microbial conversion of renewable feedstocks has a huge potential for cleaner, sustainable industrial production of fuels and chemicals. Microbial production of organic acids is a promising approach for production of chemical building blocks that can replace their petrochemically derived equivalents. Although Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not naturally produce organic acids in large quantities, its robustness, pH tolerance, simple nutrient requirements and long history as an industrial workhorse make it an excellent candidate biocatalyst for such processes. Genetic engineering, along with evolution and selection, has been successfully used to divert carbon from ethanol, the natural endproduct of S. cerevisiae, to pyruvate. Further engineering, which included expression of heterologous enzymes and transporters, yielded strains capable of producing lactate and malate from pyruvate. Besides these metabolic engineering strategies, this review discusses the impact of transport and energetics as well as the tolerance towards these organic acids. In addition to recent progress in engineering S. cerevisiae for organic acid production, the key limitations and challenges are discussed in the context of sustainable industrial production of organic acids from renewable feedstocks.BiotechnologyApplied Science

    Generic and specific transcriptional responses to different weak organic acids in anaerobic chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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    Transcriptional responses to four weak organic acids (benzoate, sorbate, acetate and propionate) were investigated in anaerobic, glucose-limited chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To enable quantitative comparison of the responses to the acids, their concentrations were chosen such that they caused a 50% decrease of the biomass yield on glucose. The concentration of each acid required to achieve this yield was negatively correlated with membrane affinity. Microarray analysis revealed that each acid caused hundreds of transcripts to change by over twofold relative to reference cultures without added organic acids. However, only 14 genes were consistently upregulated in response to all acids. The moderately lipophilic compounds benzoate and sorbate and, to a lesser extent, the less lipophilic acids acetate and propionate showed overlapping transcriptional responses. Statistical analysis for overrepresented functional categories and upstream regulatory elements indicated that responses to the strongly lipophilic acids were focused on genes related to the cell wall, while acetate and propionate had a stronger impact on membrane-associated transport processes. The fact that S. cerevisiae exhibits a minimal generic transcriptional response to weak organic acids along with extensive specific responses is relevant for interpreting and controlling weak acid toxicity in food products and in industrial fermentation processes.BiotechnologyApplied Science

    Catalase Overexpression Reduces Lactic Acid-Induced Oxidative Stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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    Industrial production of lactic acid with the current pyruvate decarboxylase-negative Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains requires aeration to allow for respiratory generation of ATP to facilitate growth and, even under nongrowing conditions, cellular maintenance. In the current study, we observed an inhibition of aerobic growth in the presence of lactic acid. Unexpectedly, the cyb2{Delta} reference strain, used to avoid aerobic consumption of lactic acid, had a specific growth rate of 0.25 h–1 in anaerobic batch cultures containing lactic acid but only 0.16 h–1 in identical aerobic cultures. Measurements of aerobic cultures of S. cerevisiae showed that the addition of lactic acid to the growth medium resulted in elevated levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS). To reduce the accumulation of lactic acid-induced ROS, cytosolic catalase (CTT1) was overexpressed by replacing the native promoter with the strong constitutive TPI1 promoter. Increased activity of catalase was confirmed and later correlated with decreased levels of ROS and increased specific growth rates in the presence of high lactic acid concentrations. The increased fitness of this genetically modified strain demonstrates the successful attenuation of additional stress that is derived from aerobic metabolism and may provide the basis for enhanced (micro)aerobic production of organic acids in S. cerevisiae.BiotechnologyApplied Science
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