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Constructing Marine Bacterial Metabolic Chassis for Potential Biorefinery of Red Algal Biomass and Agaropectin Wastes.
Pathiraja, Duleepa; Park, Byeonghyeok; Kim, Bogun; Stougaard, Peter; Choi, In-Geol.
Afiliação
  • Pathiraja D; Department of Biotechnology, College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 02841, Korea.
  • Park B; Department of Biotechnology, College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 02841, Korea.
  • Kim B; Department of Biotechnology, College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 02841, Korea.
  • Stougaard P; Department of Environmental Sciences, Aarhus University, DK-4000, Rockslide, Denmark.
  • Choi IG; Department of Biotechnology, College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 02841, Korea.
ACS Synth Biol ; 12(6): 1782-1793, 2023 06 16.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37265394
ABSTRACT
Marine red algal biomass is a promising feedstock for sustainable production of value-added chemicals. However, the major constituents of red algal biomass, such as agar and carrageenan, are not easily assimilated by most industrial metabolic chassis developed to date. Synthetic biology offers a solution by utilizing nonmodel organisms as metabolic chassis for consolidated biological processes. In this study, the marine heterotrophic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas atlantica T6c was harnessed as a metabolic chassis to produce value-added chemicals from the affordable red algal galactans or agaropectin, a byproduct of industrial agarose production. To construct a heterologous gene expression device in P. atlantica T6c, promoters related to agar metabolism were screened from the differentially expressed genes using RNA-Seq analysis. The expression device was built and tested with selected promoters fused to a reporter gene and tuned by incorporation of a cognate repressor predicted from the agar-specific polysaccharide utilization locus. The feasibility of the marine bacterial metabolic chassis was examined by introducing the biosynthetic gene clusters of ß-carotene and violacein. Our results demonstrate that the metabolic chassis platform enables direct conversion of low-cost red algal galactans or industrial waste agaropectin into valuable bioactive pigments without any pretreatment of biomass. The developed marine bacterial chassis could potentially be used in a biorefinery framework to produce value-added chemicals from marine algal galactans.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Polissacarídeos Idioma: En Revista: ACS Synth Biol Ano de publicação: 2023 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Polissacarídeos Idioma: En Revista: ACS Synth Biol Ano de publicação: 2023 Tipo de documento: Article