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Isobutanol production from cellobionic acid in Escherichia coli

Abstract

Background

Liquid fuels needed for the global transportation industry can be produced from sugars derived from plant-based lignocellulosics. Lignocellulosics contain a range of sugars, only some of which (such as cellulose) have been shown to be utilizable by microorganisms capable of producing biofuels. Cellobionic acid makes up a small but significant portion of lignocellulosic degradation products, and had not previously been investigated as an utilizable substrate. However, aldonic acids such as cellobionic acid are the primary products of a promising new group of lignocellulosic-degrading enzymes, which makes this compound group worthy of study. Cellobionic acid doesn’t inhibit cellulose degradation enzymes and so its inclusion would increase lignocellulosic degradation efficiency. Also, its use would increase overall product yield from lignocellulose substrate. For these reasons, cellobionic acid has gained increased attention for cellulosic biofuel production.

Results

This study describes the discovery that Escherichia coli are naturally able to utilize cellobionic acid as a sole carbon source with efficiency comparable to that of glucose and the construction of an E. coli strain able to produce the drop-in biofuel candidate isobutanol from cellobionic acid. The gene primarily responsible for growth of E. coli on cellobionic acid is ascB, a gene previously thought to be cryptic (expressed only after incurring specific mutations in nearby regulatory genes). In addition to AscB, the ascB knockout strain can be complemented by the cellobionic acid phosphorylase from the fungus Neurospora crassa. An E. coli strain engineered to express the isobutanol production pathway was successfully able to convert cellobionic acid into isobutanol. Furthermore, to demonstrate potential application of this strain in a sequential two-step bioprocessing system, E. coli was grown on hydrolysate (that was degraded by a fungus) and was successfully able to produce isobutanol.

Conclusions

These results demonstrate that cellobionic acid is a viable carbon source for biofuel production. This work suggests that with further optimization, a bacteria-fungus co-culture could be used in decreased-cost biomass-based biofuel production systems.

Background

Liquid fuel is an essential component of today’s modern world that allows global economies, travel, and daily tasks to occur with ease. There is increasing momentum towards the search and development of alternative liquid fuel sources traditionally made from petroleum due to concerns about the finite petroleum supply, national security, and ecological impact [1].

Biofuels, liquid fuels made by conversion of biomass, are a renewable alternative for petroleum-based transportation fuels. Lignocellulosics, the component of plant biomass typically discarded as waste, can be used as substrate for biofuel production and could help recycle carbon dioxide emitted from fuel combustion, potentially decreasing greenhouse gases and making biofuels carbon neutral [2,3]. The use of non-food crop biomass would circumvent disturbing the food supply, crop prices, and arable land space for food crops [4-6]. Biochemical conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to fuels and chemicals begins with enzymatic hydrolysis by cellulase enzymes and the production of sugars as the substrate for subsequent microbial fermentation. [7]. The high cost of cellulase enzymes remains one of the bottlenecks for a low cost processing technology [8]. Microorganisms used in consolidated bioprocessing systems, in which a single microbe converts lignocellulosics to simple sugars and then to biofuels, can mitigate that bottleneck [9,10], reduce cost and increase efficiency [7].

Recent studies focusing on lignocellulosic degradation have identified lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO) enzymes that can significantly increase the activity of the cellulase cocktail and accelerate cellulose degradation [11,12]. Aldonic acids (sugar acids with a carboxylic acid group at the terminal carbon), including cellobionic acid (CBA), are the main product of the LPMO-assisted oxidative hydrolysis of cellulose polymers. Growing research interest in the benefits of LPMOs in lignocellulosic degradation also arouses interest in microbial utilization of the resulting aldonic sugars. Aldonic sugars can also be formed spontaneously in fermentation settings and was considered lost sugar if they were not utilized as substrate for microbial fermentation [13]. Therefore, it is of great interest to investigate the microbial utilization of these otherwise lost carbon sources to improve process economics.

CBA is of specific interest because it is similar in structure to cellobiose, a prevalent product of lignocellulosic degradation. CBA also has less feedback inhibition on cellulases as compared to cellobiose [14], which may allow for less enzyme required in the enzymatic step of lignocellulosic degradation, which in turn would decrease processing costs.

Aldonic sugars have also been proposed as an alternative substrate to sugars for fuel and chemical production. Fan et al. proposed a novel route of biofuels and chemicals production, in which cellulase production and enzymatic hydrolysis is combined into one step using a genetically engineered fungus strain [9,15]. Aldonic sugars were produced directly from cellulose by the engineered fungus strain without exogenous cellulase production. It was demonstrated that both glucose and gluconate, the products from CBA hydrolysis, can be used as the carbon source for biofuel production by a recombinant E. coli strain [15]. However, the possibility of directly using CBA as the carbon source for microbial fermentation was not yet investigated.

To date, very few enzymes have been identified with specific activity on aldonic acids, including a recently characterized phosphorylase from the fungus Neurospora crassa with activity on CBA [16]. Thus, in this study, we explored metabolic engineering options to utilize the aldonic acid CBA for target chemical production in order to find ways to curb carbon loss during fermentation. Specifically, this study aims to build upon the work of Hildebrand et al. [17] in which CBA is produced with the help of N. crassa. The CBA produced from this system can then be fermented in a separate vessel by another microorganism to produce a target biochemical. To complete the latter part of this platform scheme, the model organism E. coli was chosen due to its well-studied genetic systems, ease of genetic tractability, and fast growth rate. The biofuel candidate isobutanol was chosen as the target chemical to be produced because it is chemically similar to gasoline, and so this drop-in biofuel candidate can be stored, transported, and utilized in the same engines and other infrastructure as used for gasoline [18-20]. E. coli has previously been demonstrated to produce isobutanol from glucose through intermediates of the valine biosynthesis pathway [19,21] (Figure 1). The engineered pathway converted the natural L-valine precursor 2-ketoisovalerate to isobutyraldehyde by a ketoacid decarboxylase (Kdc), and then to isobutanol via an aldehyde reductase/alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh).

Figure 1
figure 1

Pathway for biological conversion of cellobionic acid to isobutanol. Cellobionic acid is naturally imported into the cell and is most likely broken down into glucose 6-phosphate and gluconate. These sugars are converted by the modified valine biosynthesis pathway to produce isobutanol. PP; pentose phosphate, ED; Entner Doudoroff, CBA; cellobionic acid, CBA-P; phosphorylated cellobionic acid.

This study reports the investigation of the previously unknown ability of E. coli to metabolize the aldonic acid CBA, the identification of the primary enzyme responsible for this activity in E. coli, and the demonstration of isobutanol production from CBA (Figure 1). Furthermore, successful isobutanol production was achieved from crude hydrolysate made from cellulose degraded to CBA by a recombinant fungus N. crassa. This demonstrates that CBA is a viable substrate for biofuel and other target chemical production.

Results

Identifying genes responsible for natural CBA metabolism

Initially, a cellobionic acid phosphorylase (CBAP) from N. crassa [16] was expressed in E. coli to achieve isobutanol production directly from CBA. Surprisingly, the negative control strain (without CBAP) grew similarly in CBA as it did in glucose (Figure 2). This indicated that E. coli naturally imports and metabolizes CBA. To understand if other E. coli strains could metabolize CBA, XL-1 Blue, BL21(DE3), and MG1655 were tested for their ability to grow on CBA. These strains were also able to grow on CBA (Figure 2). Intrigued by this finding, the enzyme(s) responsible for CBA metabolism were sought. Enzymes were chosen for inactivation based on previous studies of their activity towards substrate similar in structure or size to CBA. Five genes encoding the enzymes most likely to cleave CBA, due to their previously known activity towards other disaccharides such as cellobiose, were chosen to be deleted from the E. coli isobutanol host strain (AL17, Table 1) genome: ascB, treB, chbF, bglA, and bglB. Of note is the cryptic nature of ascB previously described, in which ascB expression occurs only in conjunction with specific mutations in the asc operon [22]. The cryptic expression of ascB allowed the growth of E. coli on cellobiose, salicin and arbutin. Based on sequence similarity to other phosopho-beta-glucosidases, the mechanism of AscB catalysis is hypothesized to be hydrolysis [22], but this has not been experimentally verified. Deletion of ascB resulted in the loss of E.coli growth on CBA (Figure 2A), and ascB complementation restored the strain’s ability to grow on CBA (Figure 2A).

Figure 2
figure 2

Identification of the gene responsible for natural cellobionic acid metabolism in E. coli. Growth of strains with CBA (A) or glucose (B). AL17 (isobutanol host strain, Table 1) (circle), AL17 with ascB deleted (square), AL17∆ascB complemented with ascB expression from a plasmid (EascB) (diamond), AL17∆ascB expressing cellobionic acid phosphorylase (CBAP) (triangle). Where n = 3 biological replicates, and error bars represent standard deviation.

Table 1 Strains and plasmids used in this study

We attempted to assay the enzymatic activity of AscB on CBA in two ways, with purified enzyme and with cell lysate, but neither was successful. His-tagged AscB could not be purified since the expression was not detectable on an SDS polyacrylamide gel. In vitro CBA catalysis with purified enzyme may not have detectable enzyme activity anyway because AscB is a phospho-beta-glucosidase [22] and so requires phosphorylated substrate. Cell lysate would likely provide the necessary substrate (with CBA phosphorylated upon import), and so was used as a second way to attempt to assay AscB activity. However, cell lysate from the AscB complemented strain was unable to provide adequate enzyme levels, as it also failed to show a band attributable to AscB on an SDS polyacrylamide gel. Difficulty in expressing AscB efficiently in E. coli agrees with the previously observed phenotype of slow growth with overexpression of ascB [23]. The ascB gene was cloned onto a low copy plasmid to reduce expression of ascB, but the strain harboring the low copy plasmid still showed similar growth with that of the strain harboring the ascB high copy plasmid. This growth defect is inferred to be a result of AscB toxicity to E. coli [23].

As an alternate way to understand how AscB may be metabolizing CBA in E. coli, the CBAP from N. crassa was expressed in the E. coli ascB knock out strain. Extracellular expression of this gene restored the capacity of E. coli to grow on CBA as the sole carbon source (Figure 2A). Successful complementation by CBAP and sequence similarity to other phosopho-beta-glucosidases suggest that AscB may cleave phosphorylated CBA into sugar monomers. Further experimental analysis will elucidate the validity of this hypothesis.

Isobutanol production from CBA

Upon identifying the genes responsible for CBA metabolism, the capacity for isobutanol production from this carbon source was tested (Figure 3). CBA was hypothesized to be phosphorylated during transport and cleaved by AscB to produce glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) and gluconate [22]. In order to mimic the immediate products of CBA degradation, media with a 1:1 ratio of glucose and gluconate was tested as substrate for isobutanol production (Figure 3). Isobutanol titers from the mixed media were similar to the glucose-grown control strain. From 20 g/L gluconate, 4.9 g/L isobutanol was produced in 24 hours, achieving 70% of the theoretical maximum and a productivity of 0.20 g/L/h. From 10 g/L glucose and 10 g/L gluconate, 4.1 g/L isobutanol was produced in 24 hours, yielding 54% of the theoretical maximum and productivity of 0.17 g/L/h. From 20 g/L glucose, 4.2 g/L isobutanol was produced in 24 hours, attaining 51% of the theoretical maximum and a productivity of 0.23 g/L/h. After 24 hours of production, all the carbon was consumed (in all cultures) and none remained in the media. The similarity in isobutanol titers achieved from glucose, gluconate, and a mixture of glucose and gluconate suggest that CBA may be metabolized in the hypothesized manner. With confirmation that CBA degradation products produce isobutanol titers similar to the glucose-grown control strain, isobutanol production from CBA was then tested.

Figure 3
figure 3

Isobutanol Production from CBA. A. Isobutanol titers from strain AL17(pAL603) after 24 hours of production in M9 Production Media. 20gL Glu; 20 g/L glucose, 16gL Glu; 16 g/L glucose, 10gL Glu; 10 g/L glucose, GA; 20 g/L gluconate, Glu:GA; 10 g/L glucose and 10 g/L gluconate, CBA com; 10.4 g/L commercial CBA, CBA Syn; 16.9 g/L biologically synthesized CBA. B. Growth of isobutanol host strain AL17(pAL603) during production period. Where n = 3 biological replicates, and error bars represent standard deviation.

Due to the limited availability and high cost of commercial CBA, biologically synthesized CBA was used for most of the experiments herein (see Materials and Methods). Additionally, this study aims to produce isobutanol in a system applicable to industrial settings, and utilize not simple sugars such as glucose, but CBA produced from cellulose degraded by another organism [15,17]. Here we compared isobutanol titers from CBA that was from two sources: Chemical (commercial) or biological synthesis (Figure 3). Hereafter these CBA will be called commercial or synthesized, respectively. To ensure that the synthesized CBA did not contain any inhibitors that would hinder isobutanol production, a comparison of isobutanol production from both synthesized and commercial CBA was performed. Since purity analysis of commercial CBA was not available, MS analysis and HPLC measurement were performed. The commercial CBA was found to be ~56% pure and 10.4 g/ L was the actual starting concentration instead of the expected 20 g/L. From 10.4 g/L of commercial CBA, 2.7 g/L isobutanol was produced within 24 hours, yielding a productivity of 0.11 g/L/h and 65% of the theoretical maximum (Figure 3A). In comparison, from 10 g/L glucose 2.3 g/L isobutanol was produced, representing 56% of the theoretical maximum. A target concentration of 20 g/L synthesized CBA was measured by HPLC to actually be 16.9 g/L. From 16.9 g/L synthesized CBA, 2.4 g/L isobutanol was produced in 24 hours, achieving 36% of the theoretical maximum with a productivity 0.10 g/L/h. In comparison, from 16 g/L glucose 3.6 g/L isobutanol was produced, representing 55% the theoretical maximum and a productivity of 0.15 g/L/h (Figure 3A).

From the above data, it appears that under the tested conditions, synthesized CBA is not converted into isobutanol as well as glucose. It was possible that components used to synthesize CBA inhibited efficient isobutanol production, and so isobutanol production was tested with each chemical separately added to production media containing either glucose or gluconate, mimicking the amount that would be in CBA production media (Figure 4). Production media with glucose or gluconate plus either ABTS or sodium citrate had similar isobutanol titers to media without these additional chemicals (Figure 4). This suggests that neither of these chemicals inhibit the consumption of glucose or gluconate, or the production of isobutanol. To test if there were any other inhibitors unaccounted for in the synthesized CBA media, 20 g/L glucose was added to media with 40 g/L synthesized CBA. This mixed media produced 5.1 g/L isobutanol. Media with either 20 g/L glucose or 40 g/L synthesized CBA, produced 4 g/L or 2 g/L isobutanol, respectively (Figure 4). The additive isobutanol titer from these two carbon sources individually (6 g/L) is approximately the titer observed from the mixed (glucose and CBA) media (5.1 g/L).

Figure 4
figure 4

Synthesized CBA does not have inhibitors for isobutanol production. A. Isobutanol production from AL17(pAL603) using 20 g/L glucose (20gL Glu), 40 g/L glucose (40gL Glu), gluconate (GA) or synthesized CBA (CBA Syn). Glucose and gluconate were tested as growth substrates with or without one of the individual chemical components used in CBA synthesis (ABTS; 0.1 mM ABTS or Na Cit; 30 mM Na citrate). 20Glu&CBA Syn; 20 g/L glucose plus 40 g/L CBA Syn. B. Growth of AL17(pAL603) in all tested conditions. Where n = 3 biological replicates except for 20GLu& CBA Syn, n = 4, and error bars represent standard deviation.

Isobutanol production from hydrolysate

To demonstrate the feasibility of isobutanol production from CBA produced by fungal conversion of cellulose, a scenario that more closely mimics current multi-step biochemical biomass conversion methods, the engineered E. coli strain was grown in crude hydrolysate (Figure 5). The hydrolysate consisted of Avicel (crystalline cellulose) degraded by N. crassa into CBA (see Materials and Methods), after which N. crassa was removed from the media. The E. coli isobutanol producing strain was grown to OD600 ~ 0.6, washed, and then incubated with hydrolysate containing 9.7 g/L CBA. The E. coli cells were able to grow in the hydrolysate, which had been optimized for fungal growth and Avicel degradation (Figure 5B). Isobutanol was successfully produced at 36% of the theoretical maximum yield in 48 hours with a titer of 1.4 g/L, and a productivity of 0.03 g/L/h (Figure 5A).

Figure 5
figure 5

Isobutanol Production from Hydrolysate. A. Isobutanol titers from AL17(pAL603) grown in hydrolysate. B. Growth of AL17(pAL603) on hydrolysate during isobutanol production. C. Cellobionic acid consumed by AL17(pAL603) during isobutanol production. Where n = 3 biological replicates, and error bars represent standard deviation.

Discussion

Lignocellulosics are an abundant renewable feedstock with the potential to be converted into biofuels. However, there are several challenges that prevent straightforward industry-scale conversion of lignocellulosics into biofuels. One of these challenges is overcoming the recalcitrance of lignocellulosics to achieve efficient degradation. Another challenge is knowing the identity and relative ratio of minor degradation products such as CBA in lignocellulosic hydrolysate, since product content and ratios will vary depending on the source of lignocellulosic material and with the type of cellulase mixture utilized to degrade the lignocellulosic material. A promising key towards efficient lignocellulosic degradation is the recent understanding of LPMOs [11,12], which in turn presents a new challenge since the aldonic sugar products of these enzymes are compounds rarely utilized or studied in fermentation [13]. Therefore, this study aimed to understand the how CBA may be used as a carbon source for candidate biofuel production by the model organism E. coli, and so to make use of more total available lignocellulosic degradation products.

Cellobiose is similar in structure to CBA, and while cellobiose is naturally imported into E. coli by LacY [24], it would require activation of cryptic genes in order to metabolize cellobiose [25]. Thus, since typical growth conditions were used (that do not select for mutations that allow expression of cryptic genes), and since the E. coli strain used had a disrupted lac operon to enable blue-white colony screening, it seemed likely that, like cellobiose, CBA would not be naturally imported or metabolized by E. coli. Surprisingly, our E. coli strain AL17 (modified to optimize isobutanol production [19]) was able to grow using CBA as the sole carbon source (Figure 2). Furthermore, other E. coli strains such as MG1655, BL21(DE3) and XL-1 Blue also have the capacity to use CBA as a sole carbon source (Figure 2), suggesting that CBA is a natural metabolic substrate for E. coli. To identify the gene(s) required for growth on CBA, five genes were chosen for deletion from the E. coli genome. Though many of these genes were previously identified as cryptic [22,26,27], they were not excluded from consideration because they had been shown, upon activation, to allow growth on substrates similar in size and/or structure to that of CBA. We determined that AscB is at least primarily responsible for CBA metabolism since deletion and complementation of ascB abolished and restored growth on CBA, respectively (Figure 2). A deletion in ascG, the regulator of the asc operon, was previously thought to be the only means for activation of ascB expression [22,26]. However, sequencing revealed no mutations in any asc genes in E. coli strain AL17. Therefore, this study demonstrates that while ascB may be cryptic for expression in the presence of cellobiose, salicin and arbutin [24], it is not cryptic in the presence of CBA, and has a significant role in CBA E. coli metabolism. The mechanism of CBA entry into the cell is still unknown. However, CBA is a large charged molecule and most likely enters the cell through a specific (unidentified) transporter.

The E. coli ascB deletion strain provided a convenient tool to screen for other enzymes able to catabolize and allow growth on CBA. Previously, a beta-glucosidase (BglC) from Thermobifida fusca [28] was expressed in E. coli to allow its growth and isobutanol production using cellobiose [29]. When expressed in the AL17∆ascB strain, BglC was not able to rescue the growth defect on CBA. This demonstrates the specificity of this enzyme towards cellobiose. Alternatively, when the N. crassa CBAP was expressed extracellularly in E. coli [29,30]; it complemented for E.coli growth on CBA as a sole carbon source (Figure 2). It is unclear why AL17∆ascB(CBAP) had a long lag time in both glucose and CBA, but it may be attributed to CBAP extracellular expression. The ability of CBAP to function in E. coli demonstrates that this fungal enzyme was folded, exported, and functioned properly using E. coli machinery to mediate these events.

The isobutanol titer from 10.4 g/L commercial CBA was 2.7 g/L within 24 hours while that from 10 g/L glucose was 2.3 g/L, suggesting that commercial CBA is converted into isobutanol at comparable rates and efficiency as glucose. In contrast, the synthesized CBA (16.9 g/L) produced 2.4 g/L isobutanol while 3.6 g/L isobutanol was produced from 16 g/L glucose. Isobutanol titers were 30% less from synthesized CBA than from glucose. This indicated that a component of the mixture used to synthesize CBA may be inhibiting isobutanol production. Thus, each of the chemical components required for CBA synthesis were tested individually for inhibition of isobutanol production from glucose or gluconate, but no inhibitory affects were observed for any component (Figure 4). It is possible that one of the two enzymes used for synthesis of CBA may be inhibitory towards isobutanol production. However, production from mixed media containing both glucose and synthesized CBA resulted in 5.1 g/L isobutanol, a titer that was approximately the sum of the isobutanol titers from each carbon source individually (Figure 4). This suggests that the presence of these enzymes is unlikely the cause of low isobutanol titers from synthesized CBA. Additionally, it is unlikely that these enzymes would still be active after an over 24 hour incubation for CBA synthesis, and the subsequent change in conditions (pH and salts) when the CBA was combined with production media. Alternatively, it is possible that the two sources of CBA have different ratios of the free acid form versus the lactone form of CBA, which may affect CBA transport and metabolism in the cell. Identifying the specific difference(s) between commercial and synthesized CBA would contribute toward the understanding of CBA metabolism in living organisms, and may lead to more efficient methods for CBA synthesis, but is beyond the scope of this study.

All of the carbon in all media tested was consumed within 24 hours, suggesting that metabolism of glucose vs (either type of) CBA does not occur at significantly different rates. If CBA is degraded within the cell to G6P and gluconate as hypothesized, there is the possibility of carbon catabolite repression within the cell, wherein the presence of a preferred carbon source represses the metabolism of another carbon source, causing a delay in use of the total carbon in the culture media. This possibility was tested by mimicking the first step of CBA degradation by providing a 1:1 mix of glucose and gluconate, as substrate for isobutanol production (Figure 3). Isobutanol titers from this dual carbon media were similar to those of cultures with either glucose or gluconate alone, suggesting that carbon catabolite repression was not occurring during the time points analyzed in this study. This observation is in agreement with a similar finding by Fan et al. where glucose and gluconate are simultaneously utilized in an E. coli KO11 strain [15].

Redox balance has been crucial for high isobutanol titer and yield [31], especially in anaerobic conditions, although we used semi-aerobic conditions where redox balance has a decreased affect. For isobutanol production, 2 molecules of NADH are used for every molecule of isobutanol produced. In the case of synthesized CBA, which only achieved 36% of the theoretical maximum, it is possible that once CBA is broken down in the cell the 2 NADH are not regenerated, and so maximal isobutanol production is not achieved. Gluconate may be metabolized through either the Enter-Doudroff (ED) pathway or the pentose phosphate pathway [32-34]. Metabolism through the ED pathway would likely convert gluconate into pyruvate, the building block towards isobutanol synthesis. In contrast, gluconate metabolism through the pentose phosphate pathway would not produce the isobutanol precursor pyruvate. Carbon catabolite repression and co-factor regeneration are often reasons for low isobutanol yield. However, the high yield (65% of the theoretical maximum) of isobutanol from commercial CBA demonstrated in this study shows that these are not the challenges faced when using CBA as a substrate for target chemical production. The high yield also shows that this aldonic sugar would be a good lignocellulosic substrate for isobutanol production in a traditional multi-step (multi-organism) system. The discovery and partial understanding of CBA degradation by E. coli may contribute to optimization of future lignocellulosics-based biochemical production systems that contain CBA as an intermediate. Further studies identifying the difference between synthesized and commercial CBA will help achieve higher titer and yield from synthesized CBA.

We have also demonstrated that a target chemical can be produced from Avicel degraded into CBA by the fungus N. crassa (Figure 5). From this hydrolysate, 9.7 g/L CBA was converted to 1.4 g/L isobutanol, representing 36% of the theoretical maximum, the same yield as from defined production media with synthesized CBA. E. coli was able to grow in media that previously supported the growth of a fungus, and shows that metabolites produced by the fungus are not inhibitory towards E. coli growth. This production titer and yield can undoubtedly be improved, at least in part by understanding the differences of isobutanol production using CBA created by in vitro biological synthesis, in vivo by N. crassa, and chemical synthesis methods (Figure 5).

Previous studies of CBA have shown that although it is less inhibitory towards cellulases, its degradation by beta-glucosidases (an enzyme commonly used in lignocellulosic degradation) is slower than cellobiose by ten-fold and the gluconate product causes feedback inhibition [12]. However, natural CBA consumption by E. coli negates both of these concerns. The ability of E. coli to grow and produce isobutanol from the same media that supported growth of N. crassa shows that this engineered E. coli strain has potential application in a two-step (two-strain) biochemical production platform using cellulosic substrate. Future improvements to increase isobutanol titers and optimize media for growth of both organisms will further increase the industrial relevance of this system.

Conclusions

In this study, it was identified that E. coli can naturally metabolize CBA, an important substrate in the process of lignocellulosic conversion into biofuels. Once thought to be a cryptic gene, ascB, was demonstrated as the gene primarily responsible for CBA metabolism in E coli. Furthermore, an E. coli strain optimized to produce isobutanol was successfully able to convert CBA into the biofuel candidate, isobutanol. To demonstrate industrial scale feasibility, E. coli was able to utilize CBA from fungus-treated hydrolysate and convert it into isobutanol. Though there is room for improvement in titer and yield for this system, this study demonstrates that the increasingly important aldonic acid CBA can be converted into a valuable biochemical.

Materials and methods

Reagents

All enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs (Ipswich, MA). All synthetic oligonucleotides were ordered from Integrated DNA Technologies (Coralville, IA) or Eurofins Genomics (Huntsville, AL). DNA sequencing services were provided by Davis Sequencing (Davis, CA). All chemicals for gas chromatography (GC) standards were purchased from Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Commercial cellobionic acid was purchased from MP Biomedicals (Santa Ana, CA).

Plasmid and strain construction

All strains and plasmids used in this work are described in Table 1. All primers used are listed in Table 2. pAL952 was made by SLIC [35,36]. The vector backbone was amplified from pET-Duet (Merc Millipore (Billerica, MA)) using primers HY25/HY26 and the insert was amplified from genomic E. coli DNA by primers SD127/SD128. pAL959 was made via SLIC where the backbone was amplified from pZE12-luc [37] using primers SD11/SD12. The ascB gene insert was amplified from E. coli genomic DNA using primers SD136/SD137. pAL982 was made by digesting pAL959 and pAL450 with AvrII and SacI. The 2.7 and 2.3 KB products respectively were ligated together to form pAL982. pAL590 was made by SLIC where the vector was amplified from pSA69 using primers SD61/SD62 and the insert was amplified from pAL450 using primers SD59/SD60. pAL856 was made by SLIC where the vector backbone was amplified from pAL451 using primers YT571/YT572, and the insert was amplified from pAL590 using primers YT569/YT570. pAL869 was constructed via SLIC by amplifying the backbone from pAL856 using primers SD77/SD78 and the CBA phosphorylase gene insert was amplified from N. crassa genomic DNA using SD81/SD82. All plasmids were verified by restriction digest and sequencing. All genes were disrupted by the Wanner method [38].

Table 2 Oligonucleotides used in this study

Cellobionic acid synthesis

Synthesized cellobionic acid was made by enzymatic conversion of 50 g/L cellobiose using 1 U/mL cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) (purified from Pichia pastoris [39]) 1 U/mL laccase from Pleurotus ostreatus (Sigma Aldrich (Saint Louis, MO)), 0.5 mM 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid (ABTS), and 30 mM sodium citrate mixed together to a total volume of 5 mL in a 125 mL baffled flask. This solution was kept at 30°C, 250 rpm for 24 hours. Complete conversion of cellobiose to CBA was confirmed with LC-MS (UC Davis Mass Spec facility) [17].

Culture conditions

All strains were cultured with appropriate antibiotics (ampicillin (100 μg/mL), chloramphenicol (40 μg/mL), kanamycin (50 μg/mL), tetracycline (10 μg/mL)). Minimal media was used for growth assays. It contained: 1X M9 salts (33.9 g/L Na2HPO4, 15 g/L KH2PO4, 2.5 g/L NaCl, 5 g/L NH4Cl), 2 g/L of the appropriate sugars, 1 mM MgSO4, and 0.1 mM CaCl2. Production media was used for isobutanol production assays. It contained: 1X M9 salts, 5 g/L yeast extract, 1 mM MgSO4, 0.1 mM CaCl2, and appropriate sugars. All cultures were incubated at 37°C with constant (250 rpm) shaking unless otherwise specified.

Growth assay

1 mL of overnight culture (at an OD600 of approximately 1) was harvested by centrifugation at 1,500 x g for 3 minutes, resuspended in 1 mL of M9 media without a carbon source, centrifuged then resuspended in 100 μL of M9 media without a carbon source. Concentrated cells were inoculated to an OD600 ~ 0.1 into M9 media containing 2 g/L of either glucose or cellobionic acid. Cultures were incubated at 37°C, 250 rpm. OD600 was measured at regular intervals until stationary phase was achieved by all cultures. All experiments were performed with three biological replicates.

Isobutanol production

Production media (5 mL) with appropriate antibiotics was inoculated with 1% of overnight culture. The cultures were grown at 37°C with shaking (250 rpm) until any strain reached OD600 ~ 0.4 (approximately 4 hours). 0.1 mM IPTG was then added and the strains were grown at 30°C for 48 hours. Samples were harvested by centrifugation at 1,500 x g for 3 minutes, and the supernatant was used to measure isobutanol and substrate concentration by GC and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis, respectively. All experiments were performed with three biological replicates.

Preparation of hydrolysate

N. crassa F5 ∆cre ∆ace ∆nvdB, OD420 of 0.1 was inoculated into Vogel’s media supplemented with 20 g/L Avicel and 0.6 g/L glucose, and grown for 96 hours at room temperature, 200 rpm [17]. After the 96 hour incubation, the cellobiose to cellobionate conversion was begun by the addition of 0.8 U/mL laccase and 0.1 mM ABTS [17]. The conversion was allowed to continue for 24 hours, and the hydrolysate was then filtered through a 0.22 μm filter to remove cells.

Isobutanol production from hydrolysate

Production media (10 mL) with 10 g/L glucose was inoculated with 1% overnight culture of AL17 harboring pAL603 grown at 37°C, 250 rpm until an OD600 of 0.4 was reached, upon which 0.1 mM IPTG was added and the cells were shifted to 30°C, 250 rpm for 3 hours. Thereafter the cells were harvested by centrifugation at 1,500 × g for 5 minutes, washed in M9 media without a carbon source and resuspended in 10 mL of hydrolysate (pH7) with 0.1 mM IPTG. The cells were then incubated at 30°C, 250 rpm for the duration of the experiment.

HPLC analysis

Glucose consumption was measured using a Shimadzu 20A HPLC (Columbia, MD) equipped with a differential refractive detector (RID) 10A and a Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA, USA) Aminex fast acid analysis column. 5 mM H2SO4 served as the mobile phase at a flow rate of 0.6 mL/min at 65°C for 12.5 minutes. Cellobionic acid consumption was measured using an ICSep ICE-ION300 from Transgenomics (Omaha, NE). 5 mM H2SO4 served as the mobile phase at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min at 80°C for 15 minutes.

GC analysis

Isobutanol production was analyzed by GC (Shimadzu GC-2010) equipped with a flame ionization detector (FID) and the FFAP capillary column (60 m length, 0.32-mm diameter, 1-μm film thickness) from Agilent Technologies (Santa Clara, CA, USA). GC oven temperature was initially held at 40°C for 3 minutes, then increased at a rate of 45°C min−1 to 235°C and held for 4 minutes. Injector temperature was held at 225°C and FID detector temperature was held at 330°C. Injection volume was 0.5 μL, injected at a 15:1 split ratio. Helium was used as the carrier gas. 1-Pentanol was used as an internal standard.

Yield calculations

Yield was calculated by using the following stoichiometric ratios.

Cellobionic acid

C12H22O12 → 1.92 C4H10O + 4.33 CO2 + 1.42 H2O

Stoichiometric conversion gives the following ratio: 0.4 g isobutanol/g CBA

Gluconate

C6H12O7 → 0.92 C4H10O + 2.33 CO2 + 1.42 H2O

Stoichiometric conversion gives the following ratio: 0.35 g isobutanol/g gluconate

Glucose

C6H12O6 → C4H10O + 2 CO2 + H2O

Stoichiometric conversion gives the following ratio: 0.41 g isobutanol/g glucose

Abbreviations

CBA:

Cellobionic Acid

CBAP:

Cellobionic acid phosphorylase

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Acknowledgements

This project was supported by Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Competitive Grant No. 2011-67009-20060 from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food. We thank Xi Chen, Hamed Malekan, and Musleh Muthana for helping with chemical synthesis of CBA, Amanda Hildebrand for CDH purification and offering expertise on enzymatic conversion of cellobiose to cellobionic acid, and Eric Walters for preparing hydrolysate.

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Correspondence to Shota Atsumi.

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Authors’ contributions

SHD, CAR, ZF, and SA designed research; SHD and CAR performed the experiments; SHD, CAR and SA analyzed data; and SHD, CAR, ZF, and SA wrote the paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Desai, S.H., Rabinovitch-Deere, C.A., Fan, Z. et al. Isobutanol production from cellobionic acid in Escherichia coli . Microb Cell Fact 14, 52 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-015-0232-6

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