Metabolic Engineering Communications (Dec 2020)

Developing a broad-range promoter set for metabolic engineering in the thermotolerant yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus

  • Xuye Lang,
  • Pamela B. Besada-Lombana,
  • Mengwan Li,
  • Nancy A. Da Silva,
  • Ian Wheeldon

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
p. e00145

Abstract

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Kluyveromyces marxianus is an emerging host for metabolic engineering. This thermotolerant yeast is the fastest growing eukaryote, has high flux through the TCA cycle, and can metabolize a broad range of C5, C6, and C12 carbon sources. In comparison to the common host Saccharomyces cerevisiae, this non-conventional yeast suffers from a lack of metabolic engineering tools to control gene expression over a wide transcriptional range. To address this issue, we designed a library of 25 native-derived promoters from K. marxanius CBS6556 that spans 87-fold transcriptional strength under glucose metabolism. Six promoters from the library were further characterized in both glucose and xylose as well as across various temperatures from 30 to 45 ​°C. The temperature study revealed that in most cases EGFP expression decreased with elevating temperature; however, two promoters, PSSA3 and PADH1, increased expression above 40 ​°C in both xylose and glucose. The six-promoter set was also validated in xylose for triacetic acid lactone (TAL) production. By controlling the expression level of heterologous 2-pyrone synthase (2-PS), the specific TAL titer increased over 8-fold at 37 ​°C. Cultures at 41 ​°C exhibited a similar TAL biosynthesis capability, while at 30 ​°C TAL levels were lower. Taken together, these results advance the metabolic engineering tool set in K. marxianus and further develop this new host for chemical biosynthesis.

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