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Enhancing Saccharomyces cerevisiae Taxane Biosynthesis and Overcoming Nutritional Stress-Induced Pseudohyphal Growth

Laura Ellen Walls, José Luis Martinez, Leonardo Rios-Solis*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The recent technological advancements in synthetic biology have demonstrated the exten-sive potential socio-economic benefits at laboratory scale. However, translations of such technologies to industrial scale fermentations remains a major bottleneck. The existence and lack of understanding of the major discrepancies in cultivation conditions between scales often leads to the selection of suboptimal bioprocessing conditions, crippling industrial scale productivity. In this study, strategic design of experiments approaches were coupled with state-of-the-art bioreactor tools to characterize and overcome nutritional stress for the enhanced production of precursors to the blockbuster chemotherapy drug, Taxol, in S. cerevisiae cell factories. The batch-to-batch variation in yeast extract composition was found to trigger nutritional stress at a mini-bioreactor scale, resulting in profound changes in cellular morphology and the inhibition of taxane production. The cells shifted from the typical budding morphology into striking pseudohyphal cells. Doubling initial yeast extract and peptone concentrations (2×YP) delayed filamentous growth, and taxane accumulation improved to 108 mg/L. Through coupling a statistical definitive screening design approach with the state-of-the-art high-throughput micro-bioreactors, the total taxane titers were improved a further two-fold, compared to the 2×YP culture, to 229 mg/L. Filamentous growth was absent in nutrient-limited microscale cultures, underlining the complex and multifactorial nature of yeast stress responses. Vali-dation of the optimal microscale conditions in 1L bioreactors successfully alleviated nutritional stress and improved the titers to 387 mg/L. Production of the key Taxol precursor, T5αAc, was improved two-fold to 22 mg/L compared to previous maxima. The present study highlights the importance of following an interdisciplinary approach combining synthetic biology and bioprocessing technologies for effective process optimization and scale-up.

Original languageEnglish
Article number163
Number of pages16
JournalMicroorganisms
Volume10
Issue number1
Early online date13 Jan 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jan 2022

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Bioprocess optimization
  • High-throughput microbioreactor
  • Nutritional stress
  • Pseudohyphae
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • Scale-up
  • Taxadien-5α-yl acetate
  • Taxadiene-5α-ol
  • Taxol

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