초록
<P>The conversion of variable sugar mixtures into biochemicals poses a challenge for a single microorganism. For example, succinate has not been effectively generated from mixtures of glucose and xylose. In this work, a consortium of two <I>Escherichia coli</I> strains converted xylose and glucose to succinate in a dual phase aerobic/anaerobic process. First, the optimal pathway from xylose or glucose to succinate was determined by expressing either heterologous pyruvate carboxylase or heterologous adenosine triphosphate‐forming phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase. Expression of PEP carboxykinase (<I>pck</I>) resulted in higher yield (0.86?g/g) and specific productivity (155?mg/gh) for xylose conversion, while expression of pyruvate carboxylase (<I>pyc</I>) resulted in higher productivity (76?mg/gh) for glucose conversion. Then, processes using consortia of the two optimal xylose‐selective and glucose‐selective strains were designed for two different feed ratios of glucose/xylose. In each case the consortia generated over 40?g/L succinate efficiently with yields greater than 0.90?g succinate/g total sugar. This study demonstrates two advantages of microbial consortia for the conversion of sugar mixtures: each sugar‐to‐product pathway can be optimized independently, and the volumetric consumption rate for each sugar can be controlled independently, for example, by altering the biomass concentration of each consortium member strain.</P>