Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Jun 2024)
Computer-aided design and implementation of efficient biosynthetic pathways to produce high added-value products derived from tyrosine in Escherichia coli
Abstract
Developing efficient bioprocesses requires selecting the best biosynthetic pathways, which can be challenging and time-consuming due to the vast amount of data available in databases and literature. The extension of the shikimate pathway for the biosynthesis of commercially attractive molecules often involves promiscuous enzymes or lacks well-established routes. To address these challenges, we developed a computational workflow integrating enumeration/retrosynthesis algorithms, a toolbox for pathway analysis, enzyme selection tools, and a gene discovery pipeline, supported by manual curation and literature review. Our focus has been on implementing biosynthetic pathways for tyrosine-derived compounds, specifically L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) and dopamine, with significant applications in health and nutrition. We selected one pathway to produce L-DOPA and two different pathways for dopamine–one already described in the literature and a novel pathway. Our goal was either to identify the most suitable gene candidates for expression in Escherichia coli for the known pathways or to discover innovative pathways. Although not all implemented pathways resulted in the accumulation of target compounds, in our shake-flask experiments we achieved a maximum L-DOPA titer of 0.71 g/L and dopamine titers of 0.29 and 0.21 g/L for known and novel pathways, respectively. In the case of L-DOPA, we utilized, for the first time, a mutant version of tyrosinase from Ralstonia solanacearum. Production of dopamine via the known biosynthesis route was accomplished by coupling the L-DOPA pathway with the expression of DOPA decarboxylase from Pseudomonas putida, resulting in a unique biosynthetic pathway never reported in literature before. In the context of the novel pathway, dopamine was produced using tyramine as the intermediate compound. To achieve this, tyrosine was initially converted into tyramine by expressing TDC from Levilactobacillus brevis, which, in turn, was converted into dopamine through the action of the enzyme encoded by ppoMP from Mucuna pruriens. This marks the first time that an alternative biosynthetic pathway for dopamine has been validated in microbes. These findings underscore the effectiveness of our computational workflow in facilitating pathway enumeration and selection, offering the potential to uncover novel biosynthetic routes, thus paving the way for other target compounds of biotechnological interest.
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