Sustainable Chemistry for the Environment (Dec 2024)

Production of bio-based adipic acid using a combination of engineered Pseudomonas putida strains

  • Fredrik Lund,
  • Marie Gorwa-Grauslund

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
p. 100154

Abstract

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Adipic acid is an industrially important dicarboxylic acid and an essential precursor in the synthesis of Nylon-6,6. Due to the environmental impact associated with the current synthetic methods for Nylon-6,6 production, greener alternatives based on renewable and bio-based feedstocks are needed. In the present study, the potential of two Pseudomonas putida strains engineered for muconic acid accumulation was used to produce adipic acid from the lignin-derived aromatic compound guaiacol. This was achieved by expressing genes enabling the conversion of guaiacol to catechol in the first strain, and the conversion of muconic acid to adipic acid via expression of the Bacillus coagulans enoate reductase gene in the second strain. Through process engineering, a 2-step production was designed in which 2.93 mM bio-adipic acid was produced, with a yield of 0.57 mol/mol. This is the first demonstration that process and strain engineering can be combined to obtain a complete bio-based route for adipic acid production from depolymerized lignin compounds using the robust P. putida chassis.

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