Poly-3-hydroxybutyrate is an environmentally friendly polymer with many promising applications, and can be produced in Escherichia coli cells after overexpressing the heterologous gene cluster phaCAB. In this study, we found… Click to show full abstract
Poly-3-hydroxybutyrate is an environmentally friendly polymer with many promising applications, and can be produced in Escherichia coli cells after overexpressing the heterologous gene cluster phaCAB. In this study, we found that truncating the structure of lipopolysaccharide in E. coli can effectively enhance poly-3-hydroxybutyrate production. E. coli mutant strains WJW00, WJD00 and WJJ00 were constructed by deleting rfaD from E. coli strain W3110, DH5α and JM109, respectively. Compared to the controls W3110/pDXW-8-phaCAB, DH5а/pDXW-8-phaCAB and JM109/pDXW-8-phaCAB, the yield of poly-3-hydroxybutyrate in WJW00/pDXW-8-phaCAB, WJD00/pDXW-8-phaCAB and WJJ00/pDXW-8-phaCAB cells increased by 200%, 81.5% and 75.6%, respectively; and the conversion rate of glucose to poly-3-hydroxybutyrate was increased by ~250%. Further analysis revealed that LPS truncation in E. coli rebalanced carbon and nitrogen metabolism, increased the levels of acetyl-CoA, γ-aminobutyric acid, NADPH, NADH and ATP, and decreased the levels of organic acids and flagella, resulting in the high ratio of carbon to nitrogen. These metabolic changes in these E. coli mutants led to the significant increase of poly-3-hydroxybutyrate production.
               
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