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Improved xylitol production from D-arabitol by enhancing the coenzyme regeneration efficiency of the pentose phosphate pathway in Gluconobacter oxydans Sha Li, Jinliang Zhang, Hong Xu, and Xiaohai Feng J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b05509 • Publication Date (Web): 04 Jan 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 19, 2016
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Improved xylitol production from D-arabitol by enhancing the coenzyme
3
regeneration efficiency of the pentose phosphate pathway in Gluconobacter
4
oxydans
5
Sha Li a,b, Jinliang Zhang b, Hong Xu a,b,*, Xiaohai Feng a,b
6 7 8
a
9
University of Technology, Nanjing 210009, PR China
State Key Laboratory of Materials-Oriented Chemical Engineering, Nanjing
10
b
11
Nanjing 211816, PR China
College of Food Science and Light Industry, Nanjing University of Technology,
12 13 14 15 16 17
Corresponding author
18
Hong Xu; Nanjing University of Technology;
19
Tel/Fax: +86-25-58139433;
20
E-mail address:
[email protected] (H. Xu)
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Abstract: Gluconobacter oxydans is used to produce xylitol from D-arabitol. This study aims to
24
improve xylitol production by increasing the coenzyme regeneration efficiency of the pentose
25
phosphate pathway in G. oxydans. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) and
26
6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGDH) were overexpressed in G. oxydans. Real-time PCR
27
and enzyme activity assays revealed that G6PDH/6PGDH activity and coenzyme regeneration
28
efficiency increased in the recombinant G. oxydans strains. Approximately 29.3 g/L xylitol was
29
obtained, with a yield of 73.2%, from 40 g/L D-arabitol in the batch biotransformation with the G.
30
oxydans PZ strain. Moreover, the xylitol productivity (0.62 g/L/h) was 3.26-fold of the wild type
31
strain (0.19 g/L/h). In repetitive batch biotransformation, the G. oxydans PZ cells were used for
32
five cycles without incurring a significant loss in productivity. These results indicate that the
33
recombinant G. oxydans PZ strain is economically feasible for xylitol production in industrial
34
bioconversion.
35 36
Keywords:
37
regeneration.
Xylitol;
Gluconobacter
oxydans;
Pentose phosphate pathway;
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Introduction
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The genus Gluconobacter performs rapid but incomplete oxidation of a wide range of
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substrates 1. Gluconobacter oxydans is used in several biotechnological applications 2, including
48
production of 2-keto-L-gulonic acid, 5-keto-D-gluconic acid, and 6-amino-L-sorbose
49
applications involve the production of xylitol 5, a pentahydroxy sugar alcohol. Xylitol exhibits
50
sweetness similar to sucrose and thus can be used as an alternative natural sweetener. Xylitol also
51
prevents dental cavities and is suitable for diabetic patients because the metabolism of this sugar is
52
insulin independent 6-8. Therefore, xylitol is widely used in food and chemical industries.
3,4
. These
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Xylitol is mainly produced chemically by reducing D-xylose 9. Recently, xylitol production
54
through fermentation has attracted much attention. Researchers have also gained much progress in
55
xylitol bioproduction with xylose as feedstock. Several yeast strains, including Debaryomyces
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hansenii , Candida tropicalis and Candida parapsilosis, have been used for xylitol production, to
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obtain high xylitol productivity (Table. S1). However, chemical and fermentation processes rely
58
on the hydrolysis and purification of D-xylose from hemicellulose–xylan hydrolysates, thereby
59
causing serious contamination10. A two-step process, with D-glucose as the initial substrate, has
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been developed as an alternative technique for xylitol production because of the technological and
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economic advantages of D-glucose compared with D-xylose 11. D-glucose is initially converted into
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D-arabitol
63
membrane-bound
64
dehydrogenase (XDH) 5. D-arabitol is almost completely converted into D-xylulose by m-AraDH,
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but only ~25% of D-xylulose is converted into xylitol by XDH
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restrictive enzyme that controls the overall bioconversion process probably because of its confined
by yeasts and then transformed to xylitol by G. oxydans D-arabitol
dehydrogenase
(m-ArDH)
and
5,15,16
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, which contains
NAD-dependent
xylitol
. Therefore, XDH is a key
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activity or coenzyme support.
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Studies have been conducted to increase xylitol yield. Overexpressing the xdh gene in G.
69
oxydans, resulted in 11-fold enhancement in XDH activity compared with that in the wild-type
70
strain. Nevertheless, the xylitol yield was still less than 30% 17. Given that XDH is highly specific
71
for the cofactor NADH
72
NADH is sufficient.
73
18
, researchers must ensure that the supply of reducing potential from
In other bacterial strains, NADH can be regenerated via the Embden Meyerhof pathway and 19, 20
74
the TCA cycle during the metabolism of glucose or other carbohydrates
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Gluconobacter lacks essential enzymes, including phosphofructokinase, and succinate
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dehydrogenase 21. As such, the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) is an important route
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in the phosphorylative breakdown of sugars in Gluconobacter. Moreover, PPP is mainly used to
78
generate ATP and regenerate coenzyme in Gluconobacter
79
activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH, zwf) and 6-phosphogluconate
80
dehydrogenase (6PGDH, gnd) in the soluble fraction of G. oxydans cells, as well as in the cloned
81
and expressed Escherichia coli strains. The results showed that G6PDH and 6PGDH exhibit
82
NAD+/NADP+ dual coenzyme specificity. Thus, PPP could be the main factor responsible for
83
NADH regeneration in G. oxydans 23.
22
. However,
. Previous studies examined the
84
This study aims to increase the coenzyme regeneration efficiency of PPP for xylitol
85
production. The effects of the constitutive expression of G6PDH/6PGDH in G. oxydans on
86
coenzyme regeneration and xylitol conversion were investigated. Basing on the results, this study
87
established an efficient and concise route for xylitol production in G. oxydans.
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Methods
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Strains, plasmids, and chemicals
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The xylitol producing strain G. oxydans NH-10 was isolated from soil and deposited at the
92
China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center with accession number CGMCC 2709.
93
Escherichia coli JM109 was used as a host for plasmid construction and maintenance. E. coli
94
HB101 harboring helper plasmid pRK2013 was used for transformation experiments. G. oxydans
95
PZ or G. oxydans PG (this study) were used for zwf and gnd expression and xylitol production,
96
respectively. The broad host range vector pBBR1MCS-5 was used for expression of zwf or gnd in
97
G. oxydans NH-10 24. Restriction enzymes, Bacterial Genomic DNA Extraction Kit, T4 DNA
98
ligase, exTaq polymerase, and DNA and protein markers were obtained from TaKaRa (Dalian,
99
China). The strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1.
100 101
Medium and culture conditions
102
All E. coli strains were cultivated at 37 oC in lysogeny broth (LB) medium (yeast extract, 5 g/L;
103
tryptone, 10 g/L; NaCl, 10 g/L; pH 7.0) with the addition of 10 µg/mL gentamicin or 50 µg/mL
104
kanamycin to maintain the plasmids. Recombinant G. oxydans strains were cultivated in YPG
105
medium (glucose, 30 g/L; sorbitol, 10 g/L; yeast extract, 20 g/L; (NH4)2 SO4, 0.5 g/L; KH2PO4 ,
106
1.5 g/L; MgSO4·7H2O, 0.5 g/L) containing 50 µg/mL gentamicin, and 20 g/L CaCO3 to control pH.
107
G. oxydans was cultivated in 1000 mL shake flasks containing 200 mL of YPG medium at 30 oC
108
and 200 rpm on a rotary shaker, or in a 7.5 L fermentor (New Brunswick Scientific, USA)
109
containing 4.0 L of YPG medium with pH and temperature automatically maintained at 6.0 and 30
110
o
C, respectively. Agitation and aeration were controlled at 600 rpm and 1 vvm, respectively. Cell
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cultivations were initiated by inoculating 2% (v/v) of 16 h precultures of G. oxydans strains. After
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24 h, the cells reached early stationary phase and were harvested by centrifugation at 8000 g and 4
113
o
114
in D-arabitol solution for xylitol bioproduction.
C for 10 min, washed twice with 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0), and resuspended
115 116
Vector construction and transfer into G. oxydans NH-10
117
In order to express the G6PDH/6PGDH genes in G. oxydans NH-10, two plasmids containing
118
either zwf or gnd driven by the tufB promoter were constructed, respectively. Based on the
119
available sequence information for G. oxydans (Accession number CP000009), oligonucleotide
120
primers were designed to amplify the zwf, gnd and promoter tufB genes from genomic DNA of G.
121
oxydans
122
5′-CGGGGTACCTATCAGGTTCCGGTTGAAG -3′ (the Kpn I site is underlined); PtufB-R,
123
5′-CCGCTCGAGACCTGGAACGGGAGTAAG-3′ (the Xho I site is underlined). zwf-F,
124
5′-CACTCGAGGAGGTCAGAGAGTCTT-3′
125
5′-GAGGATCCTATCGTCGCTCAAAT-3′
126
5′-CATCTCGAGACAAAGCACTGGCAG-3′ (the Xho I site is underlined); gnd-R, 5′-
127
GTAGGATCCGACGCAGGCTCATTT-3′ (the BamH I site is underlined).
NH-10
by
PCR.
The
primers
(the
(the
were
as
follows:
PtufB-F,
Xho
I
site
is
underlined);
zwf-R,
BamH
I
site
is
underlined).
gnd-F,
128
The PtufB PCR product and plasmid pBBR1MCS-5 were digested with restriction enzymes
129
Kpn I and Xho I, and ligated with T4 DNA ligase (MBI Fermentas) to generate plasmid
130
pBBR-PtufB. Then the zwf and gnd PCR products were digested and cloned into the Xho I- BamH I
131
restriction sites of pBBR-PtufB to generate the recombinant plasmids pBBR-PtufB-zwf and
132
pBBR-PtufB-gnd. Transformants were selected on LB agar plates containing 10 µg/mL gentamicin,
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and confirmed by colony PCR and restriction enzyme digestion. The expression plasmids
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pBBR-PtufB-zwf and pBBR-PtufB-gnd were transferred into G. oxydans NH-10 by triparental mating
135
as described previously 25.
136
For determination of plasmid stability, recombinant strains were cultured in glycerol
137
medium without antibiotics for 3 days. Then the cultures were diluted and spread onto
138
antibiotics-free agar plates. After cultivation, 100–200 colonies were randomly transferred with
139
sterile toothpicks from each of these plates to agar plates containing 50 µg/mL gentamicin.
140
Plasmid stability was calculated by measuring the ratio of the numbers of colonies on the
141
gentamicin-containing agar plates to that on nonselective agar plates.
142 143
Quantitative real-time PCR
144
For real-time reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) experiments, 0.5 mL preculture of the G.
145
oxydans strains were inoculated into 250-mL shake flasks containing 50 mL YPG medium and
146
grown to late exponential phase (20 h) at 30 oC and 200 rpm on a rotary shaker. Then the cells
147
were harvested for total RNA isolation by centrifugation at 10,000 g and 4 oC for 1 min. Total
148
RNA was extracted using RNAiso Plus reagent (TaKaRa, Dalian) and treated with DNase I
149
(TaKaRa,
150
pyrocarbonate-treated water. RNA concentrations and purity were calculated by measuring
151
absorbance at 260 and 280 nm using a NanoDrop 1000 Spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific)
152
and by analysis on a 1.2% (w/v) agarose gel. For transcriptional analysis of each gene, RT-PCR
153
was carried out with a first-strand cDNA synthesis kit (Promega, USA) using total RNA as
154
template. Gene expression analysis was performed by quantitative real-time PCR performed with
Dalian).
Purified
RNA was
resuspended
in
50
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of
0.1%
dimethyl
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the StepOnePlus™ Real-Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems, USA). The primers were as
156
follows:
157
5′-CGTTCTGGACCGTCTCTTTC-3′. gnd-F, 5′-CGGTTACTGCATGATGTTCG-3′; gnd-R,
158
5′-CTCGTTAAGCGTCTCCGAAC-3′. xdh-F,
159
5′-TTGGCGGTCCCTTCACA-3′. The 16S rRNA gene was used as an internal standard, using the
160
primers 5′- GCGGTTGTTACAGTCAGATG -3′ and 5′- GCCTCAGCGTCAGTATCG -3′. Data
161
were collected using Opticon2 software. Data represent the mean of three independent
162
experiments. Gene expression patterns were calculated using the the 2-
163
changes in gene expression were calculated by measuring relative abundance of PCR products in
164
samples, normalized to the internal standard.
zwf-F,
5′-GAGAACCTGAACCGCTACGA-3′;
zwf-R,
5′-GTGCCTTCCACGTCCTCAA-3′; xdh-R,
△△Ct
method
26
. Relative
165 166
Biotransformation of D-arabitol into xylitol by using the recombinant G. oxydans PZ/PG resting
167
cell system
168
Initial small-scale biotransformation was performed in shake flasks. Recombinant G. oxydans
169
cells were dispersed at a concentration of 10% (cell wet weight, w/v) in a reaction solution
170
containing 30 g/L D-arabitol, and then incubated at 30 °C on a rotary shaker. The first reaction,
171
oxidation of D-arabitol to D-xylulose, occurred under 220 rpm for 7 h. The second reaction,
172
reduction of D-xylulose to xylitol, was performed after adding 5% glucose (w/v) to the mixture
173
under 50 rpm.
174
Scaled up production of xylitol was performed in a 7.5 L bioreactor (NBS, USA) with an
175
effective working volume of 4.5 L. The pH and temperature of the reactor was maintained at 6.0
176
and 30 °C, respectively. Agitation and aeration rates were regulated at 600 rpm and 1.0 vvm for 7
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h. The agitation rate was then adjusted to 150 rpm after adding 5% glucose (w/v) as co-substrate
178
for another 40 h. When the reaction reached the equilibrium, the cells were recovered by
179
centrifugation and resuspended in fresh reaction mixture for biotransformation. The composition
180
of the final media after cell collection was determined by HPLC.
181 182
Analytic methods
183
Enzymatic activity assay
184
Cell-free extracts of G. oxydans NH-10 and the recombinant G. oxydans strains were prepared
185
by ultrasonication, followed by centrifugation at 8000 rpm for 15 min at 4 °C. The supernatants
186
were used for the enzymatic activity assays. Dehydrogenases were assayed by a routine method
187
used for NAD(P)H-linked enzymes by recording the rate of increase or decrease of NAD(P)/H at
188
340 nm with respective substrates. The activities of G6PDH and 6PGDH were measured
189
spectrophotometrically at 30 °C. The reactions were initiated by adding the enzyme solution to a
190
final volume of 2 mL as a standard condition and monitored for 0.5-1.0 min by recording the rate
191
of NAD(P)H depletion at 340 nm. The reaction mixture for G6PDH activity assay contained
192
10 mM glycine–NaOH (pH 10.0), 1 mM NADP, and 10 mM glucose-6-phosphate. Meanwhile, the
193
mixture for 6PGDH activity assay contained 10 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) 1 mM
194
NAD, and 50 mM 6-phosphogluconate. One enzyme unit was defined as the amount of enzyme
195
that reduces 1 µmole of pyridine dinucleotide per minute. The protein concentration of the
196
cell-free extract supernatant was determined via Bradford method 27. The XDH activity was
197
determined as described previously 16.
198
NAD+ and the TTN (total turnover number) assay 9
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Total turnover number (TTN) was used to indicate the coenzyme regeneration efficiency in this
200
process. TTN is defined as the total number of moles of xylitol formed per mole of NAD+. The
201
NAD+ was extracted by collecting 1 mL sample in a tube. The sample was centrifuged at 12,000
202
rpm for 1 min. The supernatant was removed and 300 µL of 0.2 M HCl was added to extract
203
the NAD+. The samples was placed in a 50 °C water bath for 10 min and then cooled on ice. The
204
extract was neutralized by adding 300 µL of 0.1 M NaOH dropwise. The cellular debris was
205
removed by centrifuging at 12,000 rpm for 5 min. Supernatant was transferred to new tube and
206
stored at -20 °C. A very sensitive cycling assay was used to determine the intracellular
207
concentration of NAD+. The assay was performed using a reagent mixture consisting of equal
208
volumes of 1.0 M Bicine buffer (pH 8.0), absolute ethanol, 40 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), 4.2 mM
209
MTT and twice as much of 16.6 mM PES (phenazine ethosulfate), previously incubated at 30 °C.
210
The reaction mixture including : 50 µL neutralized extract , 0.3 mL water , 0.6 mL reagent
211
mixture and 50 µL of yeast ADH. The absorbance at 570 nm was recorded for 10 min at 30 °C.
212
Standard solution of NAD+ was calibrated 28.
213
Quantification of D-arabitol and xylitol
214
D-arabitol and xylitol concentrations in the mixture were determined by HPLC equipped with
215
a refractive index detector (RI-101, Shodex, Japan). The reaction products were filtered through
216
0.22 µm membrane filters prior to HPLC analysis. The samples (20 µL) were injected onto a
217
Rezex RCM-Monosaccharide Ca2+ column(Phenomenex,USA). The mobile phase was water
218
with a flow rate of 0.4 mL/min at 70 °C. D-arabitol and xylitol were used as standards.
219
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Results
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Construction and expression of recombinant vectors in G. oxydans NH-10
222
PPP is vital for NADH production; in this study, PPP was activated by overexpressing the
223
G6PDH (zwf)/6PGDH (gnd) genes in G. oxydans NH-10 to increase intracellular NADH
224
concentration. The zwf, gnd, and tufB promoter genes were amplified from G. oxydans NH-10
225
genomic DNA by PCR reaction (Fig. 1).
226
Plasmids used to overexpress G6PDH/6PGDH were constructed and transformed into G.
227
oxydans NH-10 through tri-parental conjugation. The strain harboring the pBBR-PtufB-zwf plasmid
228
was named G. oxydans PZ, and the other strain harboring the pBBR-PtufB-gnd was designated as G.
229
oxydans PG. Successful transformation was verified by PCR and restriction enzyme digestion of
230
the recombinant plasmids (Fig.1). The biochemical performance of the three strains was assessed
231
and compared. The recombinant strains grew at approximately the same rate as the wild-type
232
strain, indicating that the expression vectors did not affect the physiological status of G. oxydans.
233
Figure 2 shows the activities of G6PDH (Fig. 2a) and 6PGDH (Fig. 2b) in the strains during
234
fermentation. For example, the activity of G6PDH was 4.25-fold higher in G. oxydans PZ (1.26 ±
235
0.02 U/mg) than that in G. oxydans NH-10 (0.24±0.01 U/mg) but remained at the same level as
236
that in G. oxydans PG (0.24±0.02 U/mg). By contrast, the activity of 6PGDH was two fold higher
237
in G. oxydans PG (0.143±0.006 U/mg), and 29.7% more active in G. oxydans PZ (0.061±0.007
238
U/mg) than that in the wild type (0.047±0.005 U/mg). Nevertheless, no significant change in XDH
239
activity (0.05±0.01 U/mg ) was observed among the strains.
240 241
RT-PCR analysis of the transcription of G6PDH and 6PGDH genes in different G. oxydans strains
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Cellular mRNA was detected by real-time RT-PCR to demonstrate the overexpression of
243
G6PDH and 6PGDH genes in different G. oxydans strains. Overexpression of G6PDH and
244
6PGDH showed no effects on the cell growth of G. oxydans. All cells used to isolate RNA were
245
cultured at a constant period to minimize the effect on RT-PCR analysis because gene expression
246
varied significantly in different growth phases 29. The results showed that the transcription level of
247
G6PDH in G. oxydans PZ was 12-fold higher than that in G. oxydans NH-10 (Fig. 3).
248
Overexpression of the zwf gene significantly promoted G6PDH gene transcription. In G. oxydans
249
PG, the transcript of the 6PGDH gene was approximately five times higher than that in G. oxydans
250
NH-10. This observation could be attributed to the overexpression of the gnd gene. The
251
transcription levels of the XDH gene were stabilized not only in the wild type strain but also in the
252
recombinant stains.
253 254
Biotransformation of D-arabitol to xylitol via the recombinant systems in shake flasks
255
D-arabitol was converted into xylitol by using recombinant G. oxydans strains. Differences in
256
xylitol production among the three strains are depicted in Fig. 4. Xylitol production almost
257
reached the maximum yield after 48 h. The G. oxydans PZ strain produced 18.8 g/L xylitol, with a
258
yield of 62.7%, whereas the G. oxydans PG strain produced 14.6 g/L xylitol, with a yield of 48.7%.
259
Only 7.5 g/L xylitol was produced using the G. oxydans NH-10 strain (yield of 25%). Xylitol yield
260
increased in both recombinant systems compared with that in the wild type. TTN, defined as the
261
number of moles of xylitol formed per mole of NADP+/NAD+, was (1.15 ± 0.20) × 104 mol/mol in
262
G. oxydans PZ and (7.70 ± 0.16) × 103 mol/mol in G. oxydans PG. Based on the TTN number,
263
the recombinant systems were more efficient than G. oxydans NH-10 (1180 mol/mol). These
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results also indicated that the amounts of xylitol accumulated by the tested strains were consistent
265
with those obtained from the activity of control enzymes in the PPP measurements.
266
The recombinant G. oxydans PZ strain was selected as the xylitol-producing strain. Several
267
key factors of biotransformation were optimized. The effects of substrate concentration on xylitol
268
production are shown in Table 2. In particular, xylitol yield decreased and conversion was
269
prolonged with increasing D-arabitol concentration. The maximum xylitol yield (73%) was
270
achieved at 20 g/L D-arabitol. Xylitol productivity (0.56 g/L/h) was more efficient when using
271
40 g/L D-arabitol as the substrate. Based on xylitol productivity, 40 g/L D-arabitol was selected as
272
the optimum concentration. The amount of added recombinant cells also influenced xylitol
273
production. As shown in Fig. 5, xylitol yield was improved by 10% by increasing cell
274
concentration from 5% to 15% (m/v). However, only a slightly higher xylitol yield was observed
275
when 12.5% or 15% recombinant cells were used. As such, the recombinant system was the most
276
efficient when the amount of added cells was 12.5% and generated a maximum xylitol yield of
277
70%.
278 279
Biotransformation of D-arabitol into xylitol in a 7.5 L fermentor
280
Scaled-up biotransformation in pH-controlled conversion was performed to assess the
281
potential use of the PZ strain in industrial xylitol production. As shown in Fig. 6, D-arabitol was
282
immediately oxidized at high rates within the initial 7 h after the cells were added to the bioreactor.
283
For both strains, less than 5 g/L D-arabitol was retained, and only a small amount of xylitol was
284
produced in the reaction mixture. D-xylulose was reduced to xylitol under low agitation speed and
285
DO concentration. After another 40 h of biotransformation, all the supplied D-arabitol (40 g/L) in
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the reaction mixture was consumed, and about 29.3 g/L xylitol was obtained using the G. oxydans
287
PZ strain. In contrast to the wild G. oxydans NH-10 strain (9.2 g/L ), G. oxydans PZ showed
288
improved xylitol titer upon incubation in the same reaction solution. The xylitol productivity of G.
289
oxydans PZ was significantly increased to 0.62 g/L/h, in contrast to 0.19 g/L/h for G. oxydans
290
NH-10. Thus, overexpression of G6PDH in G. oxydans increased xylitol productivity by
291
approximately 226% compared with that in G. oxydans NH-10.
292 293
Repeated-batch biotransformation of D-arabitol to xylitol by G. oxydans PZ
294
In repetitive batch experiments with the G. oxydans PZ strain, six runs were repeated in a 7.5
295
L bioreactor under defined conditions. Fig. 7 shows that the cells could be recycled four times
296
without an evident decrease in xylitol production. Only a small decrease in the fifth cycle was
297
observed. However, a remarkable decrease in D-xylitol yield (drop to 45%) was observed in the
298
sixth cycle. During the repeated-batch experiments, approximately 128 ± 5 g of xylitol was
299
accumulated in each round of biotransformation with a slight increase in the reaction time from
300
the first cycle to the fifth cycle. A total of 640 g of xylitol was formed within 245 h in the five runs
301
of the reaction; hence, the resulting average xylitol productivity is 0.54 g/L/h.
302
Discussion
303
Xylitol is an important compound widely used in food and chemical industries. Microbial
304
production from D-glucose is technically feasible and harmless to the environment, and can be
305
performed using a two-step process. G. oxydans can produce xylitol from D-arabitol via
306
D-xylulose.
307
studies implied that improvements in XDH activity alone are insufficient to increase xylitol yields
This bioprocess is mainly affected by XDH activity and coenzyme supply. Previous
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from D-xylulose 11. When 0.5 mmol/L NAD+ was added for NADH regeneration, a yield close to
310
100% was achieved. However, the high cost and limited availability of pyridine cofactors hindered
311
the economic viability of industrial-scale biotransformation using an XDH in situ cofactor
312
regeneration step.
. Mayer et al. employed purified XDH and formate dehydrogenase to catalyze xylitol production
313
Introduction of dehydrogenases by adding co-substrates, such as ethanol or D-glucose, is a
314
convenient and useful method for regenerating pyridine cofactors; this process can also promote
315
the recycling of nicotinamide coenzymes
316
transformed co-expression plasmids encoding XDH and glucose dehydrogenase/alcohol
317
dehydrogenase into Escherichia coli Rosetta (DE3). As a result, the xylitol yield was significantly
318
enhanced to 92%/85.2% using 30 g/L D-arabitol. Therefore, the engineered G. oxydans PXPG
319
strain was constructed to co-express the XDH gene and glucose dehydrogenase gene in the wild G.
320
oxydans strain. The xylitol yield was increased to 40.8% 25. Although xylitol yield was increased
321
by these co-expression systems, the yield remains insufficient for large-scale production of xylitol.
322
Considering that the overall xylitol production is limited by coenzyme deficiency, this study
323
was conducted to enhance coenzyme production in G. oxydans strains. PPP is an important route
324
in the phosphorylative breakdown of sugars, which in turn generates ATP and regenerates
325
coenzyme in Gluconobacter sp. 22. G6PDH and 6PGDH, which are key enzymes in oxidative PPP,
326
can reduce NADP+ and NAD+; therefore, NADPH and NADH can be generated in PPP 23. In the
327
present study, G6PDH or 6PGDH expression was enhanced to produce xylitol from D-arabitol in
328
G. oxydans. Physiological status of the resulting recombinant strains confirmed that the expression
329
vector with individual genes did not significantly affect the growth of the host strain. Several
30
. For example, Zhou et al.
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constructed and
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previous reports concluded that a TTN of 103–105 may be sufficient to obtain an economically
331
viable process 31. In these two recombinant systems, the TTN of xylitol forming NAD+ was (1.15
332
± 0.20) × 104 in G. oxydans PZ and (7.70 ±0.16) × 103 in G. oxydans PG. These values were
333
higher than that in G. oxydans NH-10, thereby suggesting that the two processes are economically
334
feasible. G. oxydans PZ was more efficient than G. oxydans PG not only in terms of cofactor
335
regeneration but also in xylitol production. This observation could be due to the higher activities
336
of G6PDH and 6PGDH in G. oxydans PZ than those in the wild strain. However, only 6PGDH
337
activity was increased by 38.3% in the G. oxydans PG strain. In addition, the transcription level of
338
the G6PDH gene in G. oxydans PZ was higher than that of the 6PGDH gene in G. oxydans PG.
339
G6PDH is the first enzyme in the PPP and specific for NADP as a coenzyme
32
. 6PGDH is
340
the second enzyme in the PPP and specific for NADH as coenzyme, which catalyzes the oxidative
341
decarboxylation of 6-phosphogluconate to D-ribulose-5-phosphate. Recombinant G. oxydans
342
strains with enhanced PPP and high enzyme activities could possibly produce high NADH and
343
NADPH contents during intermediary metabolism because G6PDH produces NADPH and
344
6PGDH produces NADH under physiological conditions. Moreover, nicotinamide dinucleotide
345
transhydrogenase (NDTH,Gox310-312) can convert NADPH into NADH 22. This process may
346
maintain the balance of oxidation states between pyridine nucleotides. In xylitol production, this
347
process more efficiently occurred by enhancing the expression of the 6PGDH gene, which was
348
loaded in the upstream of the PPP.
349
The maximum xylitol yield (73.2%) was obtained by using 40 g/L D-arabitol as substrate and
350
12.5% (w/v) recombinant G. oxydans PZ cells. This result was different from that reported by
351
Zhou et al., in their study, the optimal D-arabitol concentration was 30 g/L and the amount of cells
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added was 10% to produce xylitol by G. oxydans NH-10 16. In addition, the xylitol yield achieved
353
by the G. oxydans PZ strain was higher than that by the G. oxydans PXPG strain (40.8%)
354
constructed by Zhang et al.
355
promote xylitol production by enhancing the coenzyme regeneration efficiency of PPP in G.
356
oxydans strain.
25
. The present study is the first investigation that attempted to
357
The stability of the free G. oxydans PZ cells was higher than that of E. coli
358
Rosetta/Duet-xdh-gdh cells, which can recover 40% of the initial activity after four cycles of
359
biotransformation during xylitol production
360
biotransformation from D-arabitol to xylitol using G. oxydans NH-10 and E. coli
361
Rosetta/Duet-xdh-gdh as biocatalyst, the recombinant G. oxydans PZ strain can produce xylitol
362
from D-arabitol directly. Therefore, the later process is simpler.
16
. Furthermore, compared with the two-step
363
In conclusion, xylitol production from D-arabitol was improved by overexpressing either
364
G6PDH or 6GPDH gene in the wild G. oxydans strain. Increased coenzyme regeneration
365
efficiency of PPP was evaluated. The recombinant G. oxydans PZ strain produced xylitol at 40 g/L
366
D-arabitol and displayed a substantially increased xylitol productivity in a resting cell system. In
367
repetitive batch biotransformation, the cells can be used for five cycles without a significant loss
368
in xylitol production. From an economic viewpoint, the results are of great interest for xylitol
369
production using the G. oxydans PZ cells on an industrial scale.
370 371
Acknowledgements
372
This work was supported by National Basic Research Program of China (2013CB733600), the
373
National High Technology Research and Development Program of China (2012AA021503). The
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authors thank Dr. Matthew I Pena (Rice University, USA) for read-through.
375 376
Supporting Information available
377
Table. S1 Production of xylitol by microorganisms using different feedstock
378
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387
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12. Escalanate, J.; Caminal, G.; Figueredo, M.; Mas, C. Production of arabitol from glucose by Hansenula polymorpha. J. Ferment. Bioeng. 1990, 70, 228-231. 13. Morgan, J. W.; Witter, L. D. Effect of sugars on D-arabitol production and glucose metabolism in Saccharomyces rouxii. J. Bacteriol. 1979, 138, 823-831. 14. Blakley, E. R.; Spencer, J. F.T. Studies on the formation of D-arabitol by osmophilic yeasts. Can. J. Biochem. Physiol. 1962, 40, 1737-1748.
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15. Adachi, O.; Fujii, Y.; Ghaly, M. F.; Toyama, H.; Shinagawa, E.; Matsushita, K.
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production of xylitol from D-Arabitol. Enzyme Microb. Technol. 2012, 51, 119-124.
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17. Sugiyama, M.; Suzuki, S.; Tonouchi, N.; Yokozeki, K. Cloning of the xylitol dehydrogenase
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gene from Gluconobacter oxydans and improved production of xylitol from D-arabitol. Biosci.
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18. Ehrensberger, A. H.; Elling, R. A.; Wilson, D. K. Structure-guided engineering of xylitol dehydrogenase cosubstrate specificity. Struct. 2006, 14, 567-575. 19. Donk, W. A.; Zhao, H. M. Recent developments in pyridine nucleotide regeneration. Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 2003, 14, 421-426. 20. Liu, L. M.; Li, Y.; Shi, Z. P. Enhancement of pyruvate productivity in Torulopsis glabrata: Increase of NAD(+) availability. J. Biotechnol. 2006, 126, 173-185.
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21. Rauch, B.; Pahlke, J.; Schweiger, P.; Deppenmeier, U. Characterization of enzymes involved
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22. Prust, C.; Hoffmeister, M.; Liesegang, H.; Wiezer, A.; Fricke, W. F.; Ehrenreich, A.;
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Gottschalk, G.; Deppenmeier, U. Complete genome sequence of the acetic acid bacterium
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Gluconobacter oxydans. Nat. Biotechnol. 2005, 23, 195-200.
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23. Tonouchi, N.; Sugiyama, M.; Yokozeki, K. Coenzyme specificity of enzymes in the oxidative
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pentose phosphate pathway of Gluconobacter oxydans. Biosci. Biotechnol. Biochem. 2003, 67,
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24. Li, M.; Wu, J.; Li, X.; Lin, J.; Wei, D. Enhanced production of dihydroxyacetone from
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25. Zhang, J. L.; Li, S.; Xu, H.; Zhou, P.; Zhang, L. J.; Ouyang, P. K. Purification of xylitol
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26. Rajeevan, M. S.; Ranamukhaarachchi, D. G.; Vernon, S. D.; Unger, E. R. Use of real-time
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27. Bradford, M. M. A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal. Biochem. 1976, 72, 248-254. 28. Berrios R. Metabolic engineering of cofactors (NADH/NAD+) in Escherichia coli. Degree paper. Houston: Rice University, 2002, 24-25.
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29. Quintero, Y.; Poblet, M.; Guillamón, J. M.; Mas, A. Quantification of the expression of
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principles and applications for the synthesis of chiral compounds. Adv. Biochem. Eng. Bio.
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31. Zhao, H. M.; Donk, W. A. Regeneration of cofactors for use in biocatalysis. Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 2003,14, 583-589.
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32. Adachi, O.; Matsushita, K.; Shinagawa, E.; Ameyama, M. Occurrence of old yellow enzyme
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in Gluconobacter suboxydans, and the cyclic regeneration of NADP. J. Biochem. 1979, 86,
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699-709.
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Figures and Tables
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Figures Caption:
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Fig. 1. Identification of plasmids pBBR-PtufB -zwf/gnd extracted from the recombinant strain by
479
PCR and enzyme digestion. Lane M2k: DNA marker 2000bp; Lane M15k: DNA Marker 15000bp;
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1: PCR PtufB; 2: PCR zwf; 3: PCR PtufB +zwf; 4: pBBR-PtufB-zwf digested with BamH I/Kpn I; 5:
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pBBR-PtufB- gnd digested with BamH I/Kpn I; 6: PCR PtufB +gnd; 7: PCR gnd; 8:PCR PtufB.
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Fig. 2. G6PDH (a) and 6PGDH (b) activities of different G. oxydans stains. Error bars represent
484
standard deviation from mean for three batches.
485 486
Fig. 3. The transcription level analysis of zwf, gnd and xdh genes at different strains. Error bars
487
represent standard deviation of three samples taken from the same RNA sample.
488
Relative quantity (RQ) =2
489
(HGC)]; TGS: Target gene of sample; HGS: House-keeping gene of sample; TGC: Target gene of
490
control; HGC: House-keeping gene of control.
(-△△CT)
; △△CT= [△CT (TGS)-△CT (HGS)]-[△CT (TGC)-△CT
491 492
Fig. 4. Comparison of xylitol production among different G. oxydans strains in a resting cell
493
system in shake flasks. Error bars represent standard deviation from mean for three batches.
494 495
Fig. 5. Effect of the addition of recombinant G. oxydans PZ cells on xylitol production. Error bars
496
represent standard deviation from mean for three batches.
497
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Fig. 6 Comparison of xylitol production between G. oxydans PZ (open) and G. oxydans NH-10
499
(filled) in a 7.5 L bioreactor. Error bars represent standard deviation from mean for three batches.
500 501
Fig. 7. Xylitol production from D-arabitol by G. oxydans PZ in repeated biotransformation. Each
502
point represents the average value of two independent experiments.
503 504
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Tables Caption:
Table 1
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study Source
Strain and Plasmid
or
Relevant characteristics
reference G. oxydans NH-10
Wide type strain
This lab
recA1, endA1, gyrA96, thi, hsdR17, supE44, relA1, E. coli JM109
Stratagene +
q
△(lac-proAB)/F[traD36, proab , lac1 , lacZ△M15] F–, thi-1, hsdS20 (rB–, mB–), supE44, recA13, ara-14, This lab
E. coli HB101 leuB6, proA2, lacY1, galK2, rpsL20 (strr), xyl-5, mtl-1. pBBR1MCS-5
Gmr ;Broad-host-range cloning vector
This lab
pMD18-T vector
Ampr
Takara
pRK2013
Kmr; helper plasmid for triparental mating
This lab
Gmr; a derivarive of pBBR1MCS-5, harboring tufB This study
pBBR-PtufB promoter Gmr; a derivarive of pBBR1MCS-5, harboring pBBR-PtufB-zwf
This study G6PDH gene under tufB promoter Gmr;a derivarive of pBBR1MCS-5, harboring 6PGDH
pBBR1-PtufB-gnd
This study gene under tufB promoter
Abbreviations:
Ampr,
ampicillin-resistant;
Kmr,
kanamycin-resistant;
chloramphenicol-resistant.
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Table 2 Effect of D-arabitol concentration on xylitol production by G. oxydans PZ strain Xylitol D- arabitol
Conversion time
Xylitol titer
Xylitol yield
concentration (g/L)
(h)
(g/L)
(%)
productivity (g/L/h) 20
40
14.6
73
0.37
30
48
19.5
65
0.41
40
48
26.8
67
0.56
50
54
27.5
55
0.51
60
66
25.2
42
0.38
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Fig.1 303x196mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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Fig.2a 192x143mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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Fig.2b 193x144mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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Fig.3 265x192mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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Fig. 4 296x210mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Fig. 5 289x202mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Fig. 6 296x210mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Graphical Abstract 259x167mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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