Abstract

Background

Production of vitamin C has been traditionally based on the Reichstein process and the two-step process. However, the two processes share a common disadvantage: vitamin C cannot be directly synthesized from D-glucose. Therefore, significant effort has been made to develop a one-step vitamin C fermentation process. While, 2-KLG, not vitamin C, is synthesized from nearly all current one-step fermentation processes. Vitamin C is naturally synthesized from glucose in Arabidopsis thaliana via a ten-step reaction pathway that is encoded by ten genes. The main objective of this study was to directly produce vitamin C from D-glucose in Escherichia coli by expression of the genes from the A. thaliana vitamin C biosynthetic pathway.

Results

Therefore, the ten genes of whole vitamin C synthesis pathway of A. thaliana were chemically synthesized, and an engineered strain harboring these genes was constructed in this study. The direct production of vitamin C from D-glucose based on one-step fermentation was achieved using this engineered strain and at least 1.53 mg/L vitamin C was produced in shaking flasks.

Conclusions

The study demonstrates the feasibility of one-step fermentation for the production of vitamin C from D-glucose. Importantly, the one-step process has significant advantages compared with the currently used fermentation process: it can save multiple physical and chemical steps needed to convert D-glucose to D-sorbitol; it also does not involve the associated down-streaming steps required to convert 2-KLG into vitamin C.

Details

Title
Metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for direct production of vitamin C from D-glucose
Author
Yong-Sheng, Tian; Yong-Dong, Deng; Wen-Hui, Zhang; Yu-Wang; Xu, Jing; Jian-Jie Gao; Bo-Wang; Xiao-Yan, Fu; Hong-Juan, Han; Zhen-Jun, Li; Li-Juan, Wang; Ri-He Peng; Quan-Hong, Yao
Pages
1-13
Section
Research
Publication year
2022
Publication date
2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
1754-6834
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2715492245
Copyright
© 2022. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.