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Simultaneous biosynthesis of (R)-acetoin and ethylene glycol from D-xylose through in vitro metabolic engineering.


ABSTRACT: (R)-acetoin is a four-carbon platform compound used as the precursor for synthesizing novel optically active materials. Ethylene glycol (EG) is a large-volume two-carbon commodity chemical used as the anti-freezing agent and building-block molecule for various polymers. Currently established microbial fermentation processes for converting monosaccharides to either (R)-acetoin or EG are plagued by the formation of undesirable by-products. We show here that a cell-free bioreaction scheme can generate enantiomerically pure acetoin and EG as co-products from biomass-derived D-xylose. The seven-step, ATP-free system included in situ cofactor regeneration and recruited enzymes from Escherichia coli W3110, Bacillus subtilis shaijiu 32 and Caulobacter crescentus CB 2. Optimized in vitro biocatalytic conditions generated 3.2?mM (R)-acetoin with stereoisomeric purity of 99.5% from 10?mM D-xylose at 30?°C and pH 7.5 after 24?h, with an initial (R)-acetoin productivity of 1.0?mM/h. Concomitantly, EG was produced at 5.5?mM, with an initial productivity of 1.7?mM/h. This in vitro biocatalytic platform illustrates the potential for production of multiple value-added biomolecules from biomass-based sugars with no ATP requirement.

SUBMITTER: Jia X 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6127078 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Simultaneous biosynthesis of (<i>R</i>)-acetoin and ethylene glycol from D-xylose through <i>in vitro</i> metabolic engineering.

Jia Xiaojing X   Kelly Robert M RM   Han Yejun Y  

Metabolic engineering communications 20180627


(<i>R</i>)-acetoin is a four-carbon platform compound used as the precursor for synthesizing novel optically active materials. Ethylene glycol (EG) is a large-volume two-carbon commodity chemical used as the anti-freezing agent and building-block molecule for various polymers. Currently established microbial fermentation processes for converting monosaccharides to either (<i>R</i>)-acetoin or EG are plagued by the formation of undesirable by-products. We show here that a cell-free bioreaction sc  ...[more]

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