Carbon Dioxide Fixation By Calvin-Cycle Enzymes Improves Ethanol Yield in Yeast | AIChE

Carbon Dioxide Fixation By Calvin-Cycle Enzymes Improves Ethanol Yield in Yeast

Authors 

van Maris, A. J. A. - Presenter, Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, Julianalaan 67, 2628 BC Delft, The Netherlands

Background: Redox-cofactor balancing constrains product yields in anaerobic fermentation processes. This
challenge is exemplified by the formation of glycerol as major by-product in yeast-based bioethanol production,
which is a direct consequence of the need to reoxidize excess NADH and causes a loss of conversion efficiency.
Enabling the use of CO2 as electron acceptor for NADH oxidation in heterotrophic microorganisms would increase
product yields in industrial biotechnology.

Results: A hitherto unexplored strategy to address this redox challenge is the functional expression in yeast of
enzymes from autotrophs, thereby enabling the use of CO2 as electron acceptor for NADH reoxidation. Functional
expression of the Calvin cycle enzymes phosphoribulokinase (PRK) and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase
(Rubisco) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae led to a 90% reduction of the by-product glycerol and a 10% increase in
ethanol production in sugar-limited chemostat cultures on a mixture of glucose and galactose. Co-expression of the
Escherichia coli chaperones GroEL and GroES was key to successful expression of CbbM, a form-II Rubisco from the
chemolithoautotrophic bacterium Thiobacillus denitrificans in yeast.

Conclusions: Our results demonstrate functional expression of Rubisco in a heterotrophic eukaryote and
demonstrate how incorporation of CO2 as a co-substrate in metabolic engineering of heterotrophic industrial
microorganisms can be used to improve product yields. Rapid advances in molecular biology should allow for rapid
insertion of this 4-gene expression cassette in industrial yeast strains to improve production, not only of 1st and
2nd generation ethanol production, but also of other renewable fuels or chemicals.