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In Vitro Bioconversion of Pyruvate to n-Butanol with Minimized Cofactor Utilization.
Reiße, Steven; Haack, Martina; Garbe, Daniel; Sommer, Bettina; Steffler, Fabian; Carsten, Jörg; Bohnen, Frank; Sieber, Volker; Brück, Thomas.
Afiliación
  • Reiße S; Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Munich, Garching, Germany; B&B Sustainable Innovations GmbH, Köln, Germany.
  • Haack M; Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Munich , Garching , Germany.
  • Garbe D; Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Munich , Garching , Germany.
  • Sommer B; Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Munich , Garching , Germany.
  • Steffler F; Straubing Center of Science, Technical University of Munich , Straubing , Germany.
  • Carsten J; Straubing Center of Science, Technical University of Munich , Straubing , Germany.
  • Bohnen F; B&B Sustainable Innovations GmbH , Köln , Germany.
  • Sieber V; Straubing Center of Science, Technical University of Munich , Straubing , Germany.
  • Brück T; Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Munich, Garching, Germany; B&B Sustainable Innovations GmbH, Köln, Germany.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27800475
Due to enhanced energy content and reduced hygroscopicity compared with ethanol, n-butanol is flagged as the next generation biofuel and platform chemical. In addition to conventional cellular systems, n-butanol bioproduction by enzyme cascades is gaining momentum due to simplified process control. In contrast to other bio-based alcohols like ethanol and isobutanol, cell-free n-butanol biosynthesis from the central metabolic intermediate pyruvate involves cofactors [NAD(P)H, CoA] and acetyl-CoA-dependent intermediates, which complicates redox and energy balancing of the reaction system. We have devised a biochemical process for cell-free n-butanol production that only involves three enzyme activities, thereby eliminating the need for acetyl-CoA. Instead, the process utilizes only NADH as the sole redox mediator. Central to this new process is the amino acid catalyzed enamine-aldol condensation, which transforms acetaldehyde directly into crotonaldehyde. Subsequently, crotonaldehyde is reduced to n-butanol applying a 2-enoate reductase and an alcohol dehydrogenase, respectively. In essence, we achieved conversion of the platform intermediate pyruvate to n-butanol utilizing a biocatalytic cascade comprising only three enzyme activities and NADH as reducing equivalent. With reference to previously reported cell-free n-butanol reaction cascades, we have eliminated five enzyme activities and the requirement of CoA as cofactor. Our proof-of-concept demonstrates that n-butanol was synthesized at neutral pH and 50°C. This integrated reaction concept allowed GC detection of all reaction intermediates and n-butanol production of 148 mg L-1 (2 mM), which compares well with other cell-free n-butanol production processes.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: Front Bioeng Biotechnol Año: 2016 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Alemania

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: Front Bioeng Biotechnol Año: 2016 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Alemania