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Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering has aided the production of chemicals using renewable resources, thus offering a solution to our dependence on the dwindling petroleum resources. While a major portion of petroleum resources go towards production of fuels, a significant fraction also goes towards production of specialty chemicals. There has

Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering has aided the production of chemicals using renewable resources, thus offering a solution to our dependence on the dwindling petroleum resources. While a major portion of petroleum resources go towards production of fuels, a significant fraction also goes towards production of specialty chemicals. There has been a growing interest in recent years in commercializing bio-based production of such high value compounds. In this thesis the biosynthesis of aromatic esters has been explored, which have typical application as flavor and fragrance additive to food, drinks and cosmetics. Recent progress in pathway engineering has led to the construction of several aromatic alcohol producing pathways, the likes of which can be utilized to engineer aromatic ester biosynthesis by addition of a suitable enzyme from the acyltransferase class. Enzyme selection and screening done in this work has identified chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase enzyme(CAT) as a potential candidate to complete the biosynthetic pathways for each of 2-phenethyl acetate, benzyl acetate, phenyl acetate and acetyl salicylate. In the end, E. coli strains capable of producing up to 60 mg/L 2-phenethyl acetate directly from glucose were successfully constructed by co-expressing CAT in a previously engineered 2-phenylethanol producing host.
ContributorsMadathil Soman Pillai, Karthika (Author) / Nielsen, David (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Torres, Cesar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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The world today needs novel solutions to address current challenges in areas spanning areas from sustainable manufacturing to healthcare, and biotechnology offers the potential to help address some of these issues. One tool that offers opportunities across multiple industries is the use of nonribosomal peptide synthases (NRPSs). These are modular

The world today needs novel solutions to address current challenges in areas spanning areas from sustainable manufacturing to healthcare, and biotechnology offers the potential to help address some of these issues. One tool that offers opportunities across multiple industries is the use of nonribosomal peptide synthases (NRPSs). These are modular biological factories with individualized subunits that function in concert to create novel peptides.One element at the heart of environmental health debates today is plastics. Biodegradable alternatives for petroleum-based plastics is a necessity. One NRPS, cyanophycin synthetase (CphA), can produce cyanophycin grana protein (CGP), a polymer composed of a poly-aspartic acid backbone with arginine side chains. The aspartic backbone has the potential to replace synthetic polyacrylate, although current production costs are prohibitive. In Chapter 2, a CphA variant from Tatumella morbirosei is characterized, that produces up to 3x more CGP than other known variants, and shows high iCGP specificity in both flask and bioreactor trials. Another CphA variant, this one from Acinetobacter baylyi, underwent rational protein design to create novel mutants. One, G217K, is 34% more productive than the wild type, while G163K produces a CGP with shorter chain lengths. The current structure refined from 4.4Å to 3.5Å. Another exciting application of NRPSs is in healthcare. They can be used to generate novel peptides such as complex antibiotics. A recently discovered iterative polyketide synthase (IPTK), dubbed AlnB, produces an antibiotic called allenomycin. One of the modular subunits, a dehydratase named AlnB_DH, was crystallized to 2.45Å. Several mutations were created in multiple active site residues to help understand the functional mechanism of AlnB_DH. A preliminary holoenzyme AlnB structure at 3.8Å was generated although the large disorganized regions demonstrated an incomplete structure. It was found that chain length is the primary factor in driving dehydratase action within AlnB_DH, which helps lend understanding to this module.
ContributorsSwain, Kyle (Author) / Nannenga, Brent (Thesis advisor) / Nielsen, David (Committee member) / Mills, Jeremy (Committee member) / Seo, Eileen (Committee member) / Acharya, Abhinav (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022