T43 Applications of carboxylic acid reductases in oleaginous microbes
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Key Ballroom, 2nd fl (Hilton Baltimore)
M. Resch*, J. Linger, S.R. Decker and G. Beckham, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, USA; J. McGeehan, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom; K. Tyo, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
Carboxylic acid reductases (CARs) are recently emerging reductive enzymes for the direct production of aldehydes from biologically-produced carboxylic acids. Recent work has demonstrated that these powerful enzymes are able to reduce a very broad range of volatile- to long-chain fatty acids as well as aromatic acids. Here, we express four CAR enzymes from different fungal origins to test their activity against fatty acids commonly produced in oleaginous microbes. These in vitro results will inform metabolic engineering strategies to conduct mild biological reduction of carboxylic acids in situ, which is conventionally done via hydrotreaing catalysis at high temperatures and hydrogen pressures.