Impact of oleic acid as co-substrate of glucose on "short" and "long-term" Crabtree effect in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Archive ouverte

Marc, Jillian | Feria Gervasio, David | Mouret, Jean-Roch | Guillouet, Stéphane

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

Background: Optimization of industrial biomass directed processes requires the highest biomass yield as possible. Yet, some useful yeasts like Saccharomyces cerevisiae are subject to the Crabtree effect under glucose excess. This phenomenon can occur in large scale tank where heterogeneities in glucose concentrations exist. Therefore yeasts encounter local environments with glucose excess leading to ethanol production to the detriment of biomass formation. We previously demonstrated that oleic acid as a co-substrate in glucose-limited chemostat allowed to delay and modulate the "short-term" Crabtree effect in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here we further investigated the effect of oleic acid as a modulator of the Crabtree effect. Results: The impact of oleic acid as co-substrate on the Crabtree effect was investigated in terms of i) strain specificity, ii) reversibility of the potential effect with aerobic glucose-excess batches and iii) durability and maximal capacities under high ethanol stress with glucose-excess fed-batches. First, the addition of oleic acid resulted in an increase of the critical dilution rate by 8% and the specific carbon uptake rate by 18%. Furthermore, a delay was observed for the onset of ethanol production when a batch was inoculated with cells previously grown in glucose-oleate chemostat. Finally, the culture of adapted cells in a glucose-oleate fed-batch led to a redirection of the carbon flux toward biomass production, with a 73% increase in the biomass yield. Conclusions: This work demonstrated clearly that the perturbation by oleic acid as co-substrate resulted in a decrease in the "short-term" and "long-term" Crabtree effects. This impact was not strain dependent and reversible. Thus, industrial applications of this biochemical strategy could be envisaged to tackle heterogeneities issues in large scale tanks or to prepare starter yeasts for various applications.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Metabolic pathway engineering in Cupriavidus necator as platform for biofuel and chemicals production from CO2.

Archive ouverte | Crepin, Lucie | CCSD

International audience

Over expression of GroESL in Cupriavidus necator for heterotrophic and autotrophic isopropanol production

Archive ouverte | Marc, Jillian | CCSD

We previously reported a metabolic engineering strategy to develop an isopropanol producing strain of Cupriavidus necator leading to production of 3.4gL-1 isopropanol. In order to reach higher titers, isopropanol toxicity to the c...

Oleic acid delays and modulates the transition from respiratory to fermentative metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae after exposure to glucose excess

Archive ouverte | Feria-Gervasio, David | CCSD

International audience. This work aimed to study the transition from respiratory to fermentative metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK 113-7D and more specifically to evaluate the implication of the acetyl-c...

Chargement des enrichissements...