Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Dec 2014)

Production of fatty acid-derived valuable chemicals in synthetic microbes

  • Ai-Qun eYu,
  • Ai-Qun eYu,
  • Nina Kurniasih Pratomo Juwono,
  • Nina Kurniasih Pratomo Juwono,
  • Susanna Su Jan Leong,
  • Susanna Su Jan Leong,
  • Susanna Su Jan Leong,
  • Matthew Wook Chang,
  • Matthew Wook Chang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2014.00078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

Read online

Fatty acid derivatives, such as hydroxy fatty acids, fatty alcohols, fatty acid methyl/ethyl esters and fatty alka(e)nes, have a wide range of industrial applications including plastics, lubricants and fuels. Currently, these chemicals are obtained mainly through chemical synthesis, which is complex and costly, and their availability from natural biological sources is extremely limited. Metabolic engineering of microorganisms has provided a platform for effective production of these valuable biochemicals. Notably, synthetic biology-based metabolic engineering strategies have been extensively applied to refactor microorganisms for improved biochemical production. Here, we reviewed (i) the current status of metabolic engineering of microbes that produce fatty acid-derived valuable chemicals, and (ii) the recent progress of synthetic biology approaches that assist metabolic engineering, such as mRNA secondary structure engineering, sensor-regulator system, regulatable expression system, ultrasensitive input/output control system, and computer science-based design of complex gene circuits. Furthermore, key challenges and strategies were discussed. Finally, we concluded that synthetic biology provides useful metabolic engineering strategies for economically viable production of fatty acid-derived valuable chemicals in engineered microbes.

Keywords