Process Biochemistry, Vol.50, No.11, 1692-1700, 2015
A two-stage process for succinate production using genetically engineered Corynebacterium acetoacidophilum
Corynebacterium acetoacidophilum, which is related to Corynebacterium glutamicum, was genetically engineered to produce succinate for the first time. The results of genetic experiments in C. acetoacidophilum ATCC13870 showed that disrupting the lactate and acetate formation pathways, as well as overexpressing the anaplerotic enzyme pyruvate carboxylase, could increase succinate production and decrease the formation of by-products. Among the six engineered C. acetoacidophilum strains, Delta ldhA, Delta ldhA Delta pta-ackA, Delta ldhA Delta pta-ackA Delta ctfA, Delta ldhA Delta aceE, Delta ldhA/pXMJ19-pyc, and Delta ldhA Delta aceE/pXMJ19-pyc, merely deleting the L-lactate dehydrogenase gene ldhA and overexpressing the pyruvate carboxylase gene pyc yielded the optimum production of succinate under oxygen deprivation. A two-stage bioprocess was conducted in a 3-L fermenter to produce succinate using strain Delta ldhA/pXMJ19-pyc, in which cells were first grown aerobically, after which glucose and bicarbonate were directly added to the cultures for conversion under oxygen-deprived conditions. The succinate concentration reached 908 mM, with an overall yield of 1.34 mol (mol glucose)(-1) and volumetric productivity of 9.5 mM h(-1), suggesting a new potential approach for the industrial production of succinate. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.