Environmentally safe production of 7-ACA by recombinant Acremonium chrysogenum.
Yan Liu, Guihua Gong, Chunbao Zhu, Baoquan Zhu, Youjia Hu
Index: Curr. Microbiol. 61(6) , 609-14, (2010)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
7-Amino cephalosporanic acid (7-ACA), which is currently obtained by chemical deacylation from cephalosporin C (CPC), is a major intermediate for industrial production of β-lactam antibiotics. 7-ACA can also be produced from CPC by enzymatic route including two-step and one-step procedures. In our research, an ecs gene coding for CPC acylase was synthesized and cloned into pET-28a(+) to construct an E. coli expression plasmid pYG232. E. coli BL21(DE3) bearing pYG232 was induced by IPTG and successfully expressed the recombinant ECS (88.9 kDa). Under the optimal conditions: 0.5 mg/ml purified ECS protein, 5 mg/ml CPC, 100 mM Tris-Cl (pH 9.6), supplement with 7 mM Zn(2+), slightly shaking for 6 h at 25°C, the transformation productivity was 54.4%. Then, ecs was cloned downstream of an A. chrysogenum endogenous promotor, PpcbC, to construct pYG233 for expression in A. chrysogenum. pYG233 was introduced into a CPC high-producer via integrative transformation of protoplasts. Two independent bleomycin-resistant transformants were investigated by PCR, Southern blotting, quantitative RT-PCR, western blotting, and fermentation. Although these two transformants both have one copy of integrated ecs, they showed different expression level of ECS protein and 7-ACA production. When concentration of CaCO(3) was reduced to 50 mM, ZnSO(4) was increased to 7 mM, CuSO(4) was eliminated from the fermentation media, and the pH was adjusted to 8.0 at day 4 during fermentation, 7-ACA production of one of the transformants could reach 1701 μg/ml, indicated that more than 30% of CPC produced by this high-producer have been transformed into 7-ACA directly in vivo. This is the highest 7-ACA production by direct fermentation ever reported.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2007-04-01
[J. Biotechnol. 129(3) , 400-5, (2007)]
Batch production of deacetyl 7-aminocephalosporanic acid by immobilized cephalosporin-C deacetylase.
2004-08-01
[Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 65(3) , 263-7, (2004)]
2007-09-01
[Eur. J. Pharm. Sci. 32(1) , 1-7, (2007)]
2010-02-28
[New Biotechnology 27(1) , 78-84, (2010)]
2012-06-01
[J. Biosci. Bioeng. 113(6) , 737-41, (2012)]