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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Dec 1997, 4633-4637, Vol 63, No. 12
M Moniruzzaman, X Lai, SW York and LO Ingram
Escherichia coli KO11 was previously constructed to produce ethanol from
acid hydrolysates of hemicellulose (pentoses and hexoses) by the
chromosomal integration of Zymomonas mobilis genes encoding pyruvate
decarboxylase (pdc) and alcohol dehydrogenase (adhB). Klebsiella oxytoca P2
was constructed in an analogous fashion for the simultaneous
saccharification and fermentation of cellulose and contains PTS enzymes for
cellobiose. In this study, KO11 was further engineered for the fermentation
of cellulose by adding the K. oxytoca casAB genes encoding Enzyme
IIcellobiose and phospho-beta-glucosidase. Although the two K. oxytoca
genes were well expressed in cloning hosts such as DH5 alpha, both were
expressed poorly in E. coli KO11, a derivative of E. coli B. Spontaneous
mutants which exhibited more than 15-fold-higher specific activities for
cellobiose metabolism were isolated. The mutations of these mutants resided
in the plasmid rather than the host. Three mutants were characterized by
sequence analysis. All contained similar internal deletions which
eliminated the casAB promoter and operator regions and placed the lacZ
Shine-Dalgarno region immediately upstream from the casA Shine-Dalgarno
region. KO11 harboring mutant plasmids (pLOI1908, pLOI1909, or pLOI1910)
rapidly fermented cellobiose to ethanol, and the yield was more than 90% of
the theoretical yield. Two of these strains were used with commercial
cellulase to ferment mixed- waste office paper to ethanol.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Isolation and molecular characterization of high-performance cellobiose- fermenting spontaneous mutants of ethanologenic Escherichia coli KO11 containing the Klebsiella oxytoca casAB operon
Department of Microbiology and Cell Science, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611, USA.
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