Engineering of a high lipid producing Yarrowia lipolytica strain

Background: Microbial lipids are produced by many oleaginous organisms including the well-characterized yeast Yarrowia lipolytica, which can be engineered for increased lipid yield by up-regulation of the lipid biosynthetic pathway and down-regulation or deletion of competing pathways. Results: We d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Friedlander, Jonathan, Tsakraklides, Vasiliki, Kamineni, Annapurna, Greenhagen, Emily H., Consiglio, Andrew L., MacEwen, Kyle, Crabtree, Donald V., Afshar, Jonathan, Nugent, Rebecca L., Hamilton, Maureen A., Shaw, A. Joe, South, Colin R., Stephanopoulos, Gregory, Brevnova, Elena E.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2020
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/125833
Description
Summary:Background: Microbial lipids are produced by many oleaginous organisms including the well-characterized yeast Yarrowia lipolytica, which can be engineered for increased lipid yield by up-regulation of the lipid biosynthetic pathway and down-regulation or deletion of competing pathways. Results: We describe a strain engineering strategy centered on diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGA) gene overexpression that applied combinatorial screening of overexpression and deletion genetic targets to construct a high lipid producing yeast biocatalyst. The resulting strain, NS432, combines overexpression of a heterologous DGA1 enzyme from Rhodosporidium toruloides, a heterlogous DGA2 enzyme from Claviceps purpurea, and deletion of the native TGL3 lipase regulator. These three genetic modifications, selected for their effect on lipid production, enabled a 77 % lipid content and 0.21 g lipid per g glucose yield in batch fermentation. In fed-batch glucose fermentation NS432 produced 85 g/L lipid at a productivity of 0.73 g/L/h. Conclusions: The yields, productivities, and titers reported in this study may further support the applied goal of cost effective, large -scale microbial lipid production for use as biofuels and biochemicals. Keywords: Yarrowia lipolytica, Lipid accumulation, Oleaginous yeast, Metabolic engineering