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Awakening the natural capability of psicose production in *Escherichia coli*

Chemistry

Awakening the natural capability of psicose production in *Escherichia coli*

J. E. Taylor, D. S. K. Palur, et al.

As obesity and diabetes rise, the need for low-calorie sugar substitutes becomes crucial. This groundbreaking study by a talented team from UC Davis explores the untapped potential of *E. coli* for producing D-psicose from D-glucose, achieving impressive yields and productivity. Dive into the fascinating world of engineered microbes and their role in creating better dietary options!... show more
Abstract
Due to the rampant rise in obesity and diabetes, consumers are desperately seeking for ways to reduce their sugar intake, but to date there are no options that are both accessible and without sacrifice of palatability. One of the most promising new ingredients in the food system as a non-nutritive sugar substitute with near perfect palatability is D-psicose. D-psicose is currently produced using an in vitro enzymatic isomerization of D-fructose, resulting in low yield and purity, and therefore requiring substantial downstream processing to obtain a high purity product. This has made adoption of D-psicose into products limited and results in significantly higher per unit costs, reducing accessibility to those most in need. Here, we found that Escherichia coli natively possesses a thermodynamically favorable pathway to produce D-psicose from D-glucose through a series of phosphorylation-epimerization-dephosphorylation steps. To increase carbon flux towards D-psicose production, we introduced a series of genetic modifications to pathway enzymes, central carbon metabolism, and competing metabolic pathways. In an attempt to maximize both cellular viability and D-psicose production, we implemented methods for the dynamic regulation of key genes including clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats inhibition (CRISPRi) and stationary-phase promoters. The engineered strains achieved complete consumption of D-glucose and production of D-psicose, at a titer of 15.3 g L−1, productivity of 2 g L−1 h−1, and yield of 62% under test tube conditions. These results demonstrate the viability of whole-cell catalysis as a sustainable alternative to in vitro enzymatic synthesis for the accessible production of D-psicose.
Publisher
npj Science of Food
Published On
Oct 14, 2023
Authors
Jayce E. Taylor, Dileep Sai Kumar Palur, Angela Zhang, Jake N. Gonzales, Augustine Arredondo, Timothy A. Coulter, Amiruddin Bin Johan Lechner, Elys P. Rodriguez, Oliver Fiehn, John Didzbalis, Justin B. Siegel, Shota Atsumi
Tags
D-psicose
sugar substitutes
E. coli
genetic engineering
obesity
diabetes
biotechnology
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