TY - JOUR
T1 - Production and excretion of astaxanthin by engineered Yarrowia lipolytica using plant oil as both the carbon source and the biocompatible extractant
AU - Li, Ningyang
AU - Han, Zhenlin
AU - O’Donnell, Timothy J.
AU - Kurasaki, Ryan
AU - Kajihara, Lexie
AU - Williams, Philip G.
AU - Tang, Yinjie
AU - Su, Wei Wen
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported in part by AFRI (award number 2020-67022-31146) from the USDA NIFA, a Specific Cooperative Agreement (SCAno.58-5320-3-022) with the Daniel K. Inouye US Pacific Agricultural Research Center, and by the NIFA hatch project HAW05040-H and multistate project HAW05041-R. Acknowledgments
Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to Dr. Irina Borodina of the Technical University of Denmark for providing the Y. lipolytica ST7403 strain.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2020/8/1
Y1 - 2020/8/1
N2 - This study aimed to develop a bioprocess using plant oil as the carbon source for lipid-assimilating yeast to produce high-value astaxanthin. Using high-oleic safflower oil as a model, efficient cell growth and astaxanthin production by the engineered Yarrowia lipolytica strain ST7403 was demonstrated, and a considerable portion of astaxanthin was found excreted into the spent oil. Astaxanthin was the predominant carotenoid in the extracellular oil phase that allowed facile in situ recovery of astaxanthin without cell lysis. Autoclaving the safflower oil medium elevated the peroxide level but it declined quickly during fermentation (reduced by 84% by day 3) and did not inhibit cell growth or astaxanthin production. In a 1.5-L fed-batch bioreactor culture with a YnB-based medium containing 20% safflower oil, and with the feeding of casamino acids, astaxanthin production reached 54 mg/L (53% excreted) in 28 days. Further improvement in astaxanthin titer and productivity was achieved by restoring leucine biosynthesis in the host, and running fed-batch fermentation using a high carbon-to-nitrogen ratio yeast extract/peptone medium containing 70% safflower oil, with feeding of additional yeast extract/peptone, to attain 167 mg/L astaxanthin (48% excreted) in 9.5 days of culture. These findings facilitate industrial microbial biorefinery development that utilizes renewable lipids as feedstocks to not only produce high-value products but also effectively extract and recover the products, including non-native ones. Key Points • Yarrowia lipolytica can use plant oil as a C-source for astaxanthin production. • Astaxanthin is excreted and accumulated in the extracellular oil phase. • Astaxanthin is the predominant carotenoid in the extracellular oil phase. • Plant oil serves as a biocompatible solvent for in situ astaxanthin extraction. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
AB - This study aimed to develop a bioprocess using plant oil as the carbon source for lipid-assimilating yeast to produce high-value astaxanthin. Using high-oleic safflower oil as a model, efficient cell growth and astaxanthin production by the engineered Yarrowia lipolytica strain ST7403 was demonstrated, and a considerable portion of astaxanthin was found excreted into the spent oil. Astaxanthin was the predominant carotenoid in the extracellular oil phase that allowed facile in situ recovery of astaxanthin without cell lysis. Autoclaving the safflower oil medium elevated the peroxide level but it declined quickly during fermentation (reduced by 84% by day 3) and did not inhibit cell growth or astaxanthin production. In a 1.5-L fed-batch bioreactor culture with a YnB-based medium containing 20% safflower oil, and with the feeding of casamino acids, astaxanthin production reached 54 mg/L (53% excreted) in 28 days. Further improvement in astaxanthin titer and productivity was achieved by restoring leucine biosynthesis in the host, and running fed-batch fermentation using a high carbon-to-nitrogen ratio yeast extract/peptone medium containing 70% safflower oil, with feeding of additional yeast extract/peptone, to attain 167 mg/L astaxanthin (48% excreted) in 9.5 days of culture. These findings facilitate industrial microbial biorefinery development that utilizes renewable lipids as feedstocks to not only produce high-value products but also effectively extract and recover the products, including non-native ones. Key Points • Yarrowia lipolytica can use plant oil as a C-source for astaxanthin production. • Astaxanthin is excreted and accumulated in the extracellular oil phase. • Astaxanthin is the predominant carotenoid in the extracellular oil phase. • Plant oil serves as a biocompatible solvent for in situ astaxanthin extraction. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
KW - Bioprocessing
KW - Extractive fermentation
KW - Lipid feedstock
KW - Yarrowia lipolytica
KW - Yeast biorefinery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85087012561&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00253-020-10753-2
DO - 10.1007/s00253-020-10753-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 32601736
AN - SCOPUS:85087012561
SN - 0175-7598
VL - 104
SP - 6977
EP - 6989
JO - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
JF - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
IS - 16
ER -