Dynamic upregulation of the rate-limiting enzyme for valerolactam biosynthesis in Corynebacterium glutamicum

Metab Eng. 2023 May:77:89-99. doi: 10.1016/j.ymben.2023.02.005. Epub 2023 Mar 16.

Abstract

Valerolactam is a monomer used to manufacture high-value nylon-5 and nylon-6,5. However, the biological production of valerolactam has been limited by the inadequate efficiency of enzymes to cyclize 5-aminovaleric acid to produce valerolactam. In this study, we engineered Corynebacterium glutamicum with a valerolactam biosynthetic pathway consisting of DavAB from Pseudomonas putida to convert L-lysine to 5-aminovaleric acid and β-alanine CoA transferase (Act) from Clostridium propionicum to produce valerolactam from 5-aminovaleric acid. Most of the L-lysine was converted into 5-aminovaleric acid, but promoter optimization and increasing the copy number of Act were insufficient to significantly improve the titer of valerolactam. To eliminate the bottleneck at Act, we designed a dynamic upregulation system (a positive feedback loop based on the valerolactam biosensor ChnR/Pb). We used laboratory evolution to engineer ChnR/Pb to have higher sensitivity and a higher dynamic output range, and the engineered ChnR-B1/Pb-E1 system was used to overexpress the rate-limiting enzymes (Act/ORF26/CaiC) that cyclize 5-aminovaleric acid into valerolactam. In glucose fed-batch culture, we obtained 12.33 g/L valerolactam from the dynamic upregulation of Act, 11.88 g/L using ORF26, and 12.15 g/L using CaiC. Our engineered biosensor (ChnR-B1/Pb-E1 system) was also sensitive to 0.01-100 mM caprolactam, which suggests that this dynamic upregulation system can be used to enhance caprolactam biosynthesis in the future.

Keywords: Biosensor engineering; Corynebacterium glutamicum; Dynamic regulation; Valerolactam.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Caprolactam* / metabolism
  • Corynebacterium glutamicum* / metabolism
  • Fermentation
  • Lead / metabolism
  • Lysine
  • Metabolic Engineering
  • Up-Regulation

Substances

  • valerolactam
  • Caprolactam
  • Lysine
  • Lead