Due to its abundance and low-price, glycerol has become an attractive carbon source for the
industrial production of value-added fuels and chemicals. This work reports the engineering
of E. coli for the efficient conversion of glycerol into L-lactic acid(L-lactate). Escherichia coli strains have previously been metabolically engineered for the microaerobic
production of D-lactic acid from glycerol in defined media by disrupting genes that minimize
the synthesis of succinate, acetate, and ethanol, and also overexpressing the respiratory route
of glycerol dissimilation (GlpK/GlpD). Here, further rounds of rationale design were
performed on these strains for the homofermentative production of L-lactate, not normally
produced in E. coli. Specifically, L-lactate production was enabled by: 1), replacing the
native D-lactate specific dehydrogenase with Streptococcus bovis L-lactate dehydrogenase
(L-LDH), 2) blocking the methylglyoxal bypass pathways to avoid the synthesis of a racemic
mixture of D- and L-lactate and prevent the accumulation of toxic intermediate,
methylglyoxal, and 3) the native aerobic L-lactate dehydrogenase was blocked to prevent the
undesired utilization of L-lactate. The engineered strain produced 50 g/L of L-lactate from 56
g/L of crude glycerol at a yield 93% of the theoretical maximum and with high optical
(99.9%) and chemical (97%) purity. This study demonstrates the efficient conversion of glycerol to L-lactate, a microbial process
that had not been reported in the literature prior to our work. The engineered biocatalysts
produced L-lactate from crude glycerol in defined minimal salts medium at high chemical
and optical purity