3 research outputs found
Discovery and Evaluation of Biosynthetic Pathways for the Production of Five Methyl Ethyl Ketone Precursors
The
limited supply of fossil fuels and the establishment of new
environmental policies shifted research in industry and academia toward
sustainable production of the second generation of biofuels, with
methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) being one promising fuel candidate. MEK
is a commercially valuable petrochemical with an extensive application
as a solvent. However, as of today, a sustainable and economically
viable production of MEK has not yet been achieved despite several
attempts of introducing biosynthetic pathways in industrial microorganisms.
We used BNICE.ch as a retrobiosynthesis tool to discover all novel
pathways around MEK. Out of 1325 identified compounds connecting to
MEK with one reaction step, we selected 3-oxopentanoate, but-3-en-2-one,
but-1-en-2-olate, butylamine, and 2-hydroxy-2-methylbutanenitrile
for further study. We reconstructed 3 679 610 novel
biosynthetic pathways toward these 5 compounds. We then embedded these
pathways into the genome-scale model of <i>E. coli</i>, and a set of 18 622 were found to be the most biologically
feasible ones on the basis of thermodynamics and their yields. For
each novel reaction in the viable pathways, we proposed the most similar
KEGG reactions, with their gene and protein sequences, as candidates
for either a direct experimental implementation or as a basis for
enzyme engineering. Through pathway similarity analysis we classified
the pathways and identified the enzymes and precursors that were indispensable
for the production of the target molecules. These retrobiosynthesis
studies demonstrate the potential of BNICE.ch for discovery, systematic
evaluation, and analysis of novel pathways in synthetic biology and
metabolic engineering studies
Discovery and Evaluation of Biosynthetic Pathways for the Production of Five Methyl Ethyl Ketone Precursors
The
limited supply of fossil fuels and the establishment of new
environmental policies shifted research in industry and academia toward
sustainable production of the second generation of biofuels, with
methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) being one promising fuel candidate. MEK
is a commercially valuable petrochemical with an extensive application
as a solvent. However, as of today, a sustainable and economically
viable production of MEK has not yet been achieved despite several
attempts of introducing biosynthetic pathways in industrial microorganisms.
We used BNICE.ch as a retrobiosynthesis tool to discover all novel
pathways around MEK. Out of 1325 identified compounds connecting to
MEK with one reaction step, we selected 3-oxopentanoate, but-3-en-2-one,
but-1-en-2-olate, butylamine, and 2-hydroxy-2-methylbutanenitrile
for further study. We reconstructed 3 679 610 novel
biosynthetic pathways toward these 5 compounds. We then embedded these
pathways into the genome-scale model of <i>E. coli</i>, and a set of 18 622 were found to be the most biologically
feasible ones on the basis of thermodynamics and their yields. For
each novel reaction in the viable pathways, we proposed the most similar
KEGG reactions, with their gene and protein sequences, as candidates
for either a direct experimental implementation or as a basis for
enzyme engineering. Through pathway similarity analysis we classified
the pathways and identified the enzymes and precursors that were indispensable
for the production of the target molecules. These retrobiosynthesis
studies demonstrate the potential of BNICE.ch for discovery, systematic
evaluation, and analysis of novel pathways in synthetic biology and
metabolic engineering studies
Discovery and Evaluation of Biosynthetic Pathways for the Production of Five Methyl Ethyl Ketone Precursors
The
limited supply of fossil fuels and the establishment of new
environmental policies shifted research in industry and academia toward
sustainable production of the second generation of biofuels, with
methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) being one promising fuel candidate. MEK
is a commercially valuable petrochemical with an extensive application
as a solvent. However, as of today, a sustainable and economically
viable production of MEK has not yet been achieved despite several
attempts of introducing biosynthetic pathways in industrial microorganisms.
We used BNICE.ch as a retrobiosynthesis tool to discover all novel
pathways around MEK. Out of 1325 identified compounds connecting to
MEK with one reaction step, we selected 3-oxopentanoate, but-3-en-2-one,
but-1-en-2-olate, butylamine, and 2-hydroxy-2-methylbutanenitrile
for further study. We reconstructed 3 679 610 novel
biosynthetic pathways toward these 5 compounds. We then embedded these
pathways into the genome-scale model of <i>E. coli</i>, and a set of 18 622 were found to be the most biologically
feasible ones on the basis of thermodynamics and their yields. For
each novel reaction in the viable pathways, we proposed the most similar
KEGG reactions, with their gene and protein sequences, as candidates
for either a direct experimental implementation or as a basis for
enzyme engineering. Through pathway similarity analysis we classified
the pathways and identified the enzymes and precursors that were indispensable
for the production of the target molecules. These retrobiosynthesis
studies demonstrate the potential of BNICE.ch for discovery, systematic
evaluation, and analysis of novel pathways in synthetic biology and
metabolic engineering studies