PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Fatty aldehydes in cyanobacteria are a metabolically flexible precursor for a diversity of biofuel products.

  • Brett K Kaiser,
  • Michael Carleton,
  • Jason W Hickman,
  • Cameron Miller,
  • David Lawson,
  • Mark Budde,
  • Paul Warrener,
  • Angel Paredes,
  • Srinivas Mullapudi,
  • Patricia Navarro,
  • Fred Cross,
  • James M Roberts

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058307
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. e58307

Abstract

Read online

We describe how pathway engineering can be used to convert a single intermediate derived from lipid biosynthesis, fatty aldehydes, into a variety of biofuel precursors including alkanes, free fatty acids and wax esters. In cyanobacteria, long-chain acyl-ACPs can be reduced to fatty aldehydes, and then decarbonylated to alkanes. We discovered a cyanobacteria class-3 aldehyde-dehydrogenase, AldE, that was necessary and sufficient to instead oxidize fatty aldehyde precursors into fatty acids. Overexpression of enzymes in this pathway resulted in production of 50 to 100 fold more fatty acids than alkanes, and the fatty acids were secreted from the cell. Co-expression of acyl-ACP reductase, an alcohol-dehydrogenase and a wax-ester-synthase resulted in a third fate for fatty aldehydes: conversion to wax esters, which accumulated as intracellular lipid bodies. Conversion of acyl-ACP to fatty acids using endogenous cyanobacterial enzymes may allow biofuel production without transgenesis.