14f Engineering a Fungal L-Arabinose Pathway towards the Utilization of Pentose Sugars for Production of Xylitol and Ethanol

Ryan P. Sullivan, Nikhil U. Nair, and Huimin Zhao. Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 600 S Mathews Ave., MC-712 Box C-3, Urbana, IL 61801

Improved utilization of hemicellulose sugars (specifically D-xylose and L-arabinose) for biosynthesis of value-added products is crucial for fermentative processes to become more economically feasible. In yeast and filamentous fungi, both pentose sugars enter the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) through a common intermediate, D-xylulose 5-phosphate. D-xylose is converted to D-xylulose 5-phosphate through two redox reactions, while L-arabinose conversion requires four redox reactions prior to entering the PPP. These redox reactions require alternative forms of nicotinamide cofactor, as the reductases (xylose reductase and L-xylulose reductase) typically favor reduced NADPH and the dehydrogenases (L-arabinitol 4-dehydrogenase and xylitol dehydrogenase) favor oxidized NAD+. This results in a cofactor imbalance that potentially prohibits the efficient utilization of these hemicellulose sugars, resulting in the excretion of sugar alcohol by-products formed by the initial xylose reductase.

This work describes the cloning, characterization, and engineering of an L-arabinose pathway comprised mainly of enzymes from the filamentous fungi Neurospora crassa for co-utilization of D-xylose and L-arabinose for improved production of xylitol, a five carbon sugar alcohol with a growing market as a sweetener. In particular, the rational design and directed evolution of L-arabinitol 4-dehydrogenase towards the utilization of NADP+ as a cofactor was accomplished in an attempt to partially relieve the cofactor imbalance involved in conversion of L-arabinose to xylitol, and is currently being investigated for improvement in xylitol production from both pentose sugars in a model organism Escherichia coli. The engineered strain generated for this work includes deletions of the endogenous bacterial pentose sugar pathway genes (xylA and araBAD) as well as a mutant carbon catabolite regulator (crp*) to allow for utilization of pentose substrates with glucose as a co-substrate.

Extending this concept even further, engineering both dehydrogenases for NADP+ utilization could conceivably create closed redox loops between the reductases and the dehydrogenases, resulting in the utilization of a single cofactor pair, NADP+/NADPH. Through rational design, N. crassa xylitol dehydrogenase cofactor specificity was completely reversed to NADP+, and the entire engineered pathway leading from L-arabinose and D-xylose to D-xylulose 5-phosphate prior to introduction into the PPP is being tested for improved fermentative ethanol production from the pentose sugars.