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Xylose fermentation from lignocellulosic material using recombinant yeast cells is a promising resource for efficient ethanol production as a future sustainable energy supply. Experimental approaches emphasize the engineering of xylose-utilizing recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains to overcome the potential bottlenecks of xylose uptake and cofactor imbalance and to minimize the xylitol accumulation. In this work, we apply systems engineering methodology to identify metabolic engineering targets for the optimization of ethanol production by Saccharomyces cerevisiae in the fed-batch culture. We employ a computational framework we have recently developed for Metabolic Control Analysis, i.e., the quantification of the responses of metabolic properties to changes in genetic manipulations and environmental conditions. We find that redistribution of the metabolic flows around pyruvate among carboxylation, decarboxylation, and transport has significant potential in improving total utilization of hexose and pentose sugar as well as its conversion into ethanol.
Maarten Nachtegaal, Rob Jeremiah G. Nuguid, Anna Zabilska, Olga Safonova
Dario Floreano, Bokeon Kwak, Pietro Rossi
Alexandre Louis André Persat, Xavier Jean-Yves Pierrat, Jeremy Pak Hei Wong, Alix Kim Lan Pham