Document details

Suppressing fatty acid uptake by a fatty acid secreting saccharomyces cerevisia...

Author(s): Ribeiro, Gabriela cv logo 1 ; Côrte-Real, Manuela cv logo 2 ; Dias, Alberto Carlos Pires cv logo 3 ; Johansson, Björn cv logo 4

Date: 2011

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/1822/15663

Origin: RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho

Subject(s): Biodiesel; S. Cerevisiae


Description
Biodiesel, in the form of fatty acid esters, produced by oleaginous microorganisms, could represent an attractive alternative of renewable liquid biofuels. Lipid metabolism has been studied extensively in S. cerevisiae and all genes encoding enzymes directly involved in lipid synthesis are known. In this model yeast, exogenous long-chain fatty acids are activated to coenzyme A derivatives prior to metabolic utilization by the fatty acyl-CoA synthetases Faa1p and Faa4p. Free fatty acids are secreted from a FAA1,4 double mutant (1), which we use as a basis for metabolic engineering of this property. However, secreted fatty acids disappear late in the growth phase, presumably metabolized by the cells (1). In S. cerevisiae the acyl-CoA oxidase ScPox1p catalyzes the first metabolic step of fatty acid beta-oxidation, and null mutants are unable to grow on fatty acids as sole carbon source (2). ScPox1p is the ortholog of the human acyl-CoA oxidase 1, and its expression is strongly induced by fatty acids. A triple knock-out mutant faa1/4-Δ pox1-Δ studied in this work shows delayed uptake of the secreted fatty acids. The fatty acid production of the modified strains was analysed by optical density of the extracellular medium and gas chromatography and results are discussed.
Document Type Conference Object
Language English
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