Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Stable Platform for Mevalonate Bioproduction from CO2

Garavaglia, Marco; McGregor, Callum; Bommareddy, Rajesh Reddy; Irorere, Victor; Arenas, Christian; Robazza, Alberto; Minton, Nigel Peter; Kovacs, Katalin

Stable Platform for Mevalonate Bioproduction from CO2 Thumbnail


Authors

Marco Garavaglia

Callum McGregor

Rajesh Reddy Bommareddy

Victor Irorere

Christian Arenas

Alberto Robazza



Abstract

Stable production of value-added products using a microbial chassis is pivotal for determining the industrial suitability of the engineered biocatalyst. Microbial cells often lose the multicopy expression plasmids during long-term cultivations. Owing to the advantages related to titers, yields, and productivities when using a multicopy expression system compared with genomic integrations, plasmid stability is essential for industrially relevant biobased processes. Cupriavidus necator H16, a facultative chemolithoautotrophic bacterium, has been successfully engineered to convert inorganic carbon obtained from CO2 fixation into value-added products. The application of this unique capability in the biotech industry has been hindered by C. necator H16 inability to stably maintain multicopy plasmids. In this study, we designed and tested plasmid addiction systems based on the complementation of essential genes. Among these, implementation of a plasmid addiction tool based on the complementation of mutants lacking RubisCO, which is essential for CO2 fixation, successfully stabilized a multicopy plasmid. Expressing the mevalonate pathway operon (MvaES) using this addiction system resulted in the production of ∼10 g/L mevalonate with carbon yields of ∼25%. The mevalonate titers and yields obtained here using CO2 are the highest achieved to date for the production of C6 compounds from C1 feedstocks.

Citation

Garavaglia, M., McGregor, C., Bommareddy, R. R., Irorere, V., Arenas, C., Robazza, A., Minton, N. P., & Kovacs, K. (2024). Stable Platform for Mevalonate Bioproduction from CO2. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, 12(36), 13486-13499. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.4c03561

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 19, 2024
Online Publication Date Aug 26, 2024
Publication Date Sep 9, 2024
Deposit Date Aug 31, 2024
Publicly Available Date Sep 2, 2024
Journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering
Electronic ISSN 2168-0485
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 12
Issue 36
Pages 13486-13499
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.4c03561
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/38913440
Publisher URL https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acssuschemeng.4c03561

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations