High-level production of the agmatine in engineered Corynebacterium crenatum with the inhibition-releasing arginine decarboxylase

Agmatine is a member of biogenic amines and is an important medicine which is widely used to regulate body balance and neuroprotective effects. At present, the industrial production of agmatine mainly depends on the chemical method, but it is often accompanied by problems including cumbersome proces...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microbial cell factories 2022-01, Vol.21 (1), p.16-16, Article 16
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Fengyu, Xu, Jiayu, Zhu, Yichun, Wang, Yi, Xu, Meijuan, Rao, Zhiming
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Agmatine is a member of biogenic amines and is an important medicine which is widely used to regulate body balance and neuroprotective effects. At present, the industrial production of agmatine mainly depends on the chemical method, but it is often accompanied by problems including cumbersome processes, harsh reaction conditions, toxic substances production and heavy environmental pollution. Therefore, to tackle the above issues, arginine decarboxylase was overexpressed heterologously and rationally designed in Corynebacterium crenatum to produce agmatine from glucose by one-step fermentation. In this study, we report the development in the Generally Regarded as Safe (GRAS) L-arginine-overproducing C. crenatum for high-titer agmatine biosynthesis through overexpressing arginine decarboxylase based on metabolic engineering. Then, arginine decarboxylase was mutated to release feedback inhibition and improve catalytic activity. Subsequently, the specific enzyme activity and half-inhibitory concentration of I534D mutant were increased 35.7% and 48.1%, respectively. The agmatine production of the whole-cell bioconversion with AGM3 was increased by 19.3% than the AGM2. Finally, 45.26 g/L agmatine with the yield of 0.31 g/g glucose was achieved by one-step fermentation of the engineered C. crenatum with overexpression of speA . The engineered C. crenatum strain AGM3 in this work was proved as an efficient microbial cell factory for the industrial fermentative production of agmatine. Based on the insights from this work, further producing other valuable biochemicals derived from L-arginine by Corynebacterium crenatum is feasible.
ISSN:1475-2859
1475-2859
DOI:10.1186/s12934-022-01742-3