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Titel: Substrate-informed metabolic engineering of Corynebacterium glutamicum enables balanced glucose-xylose co-utilization for the valorization of lignocellulosic feedstocks
VerfasserIn: Mees, David J.
Cao, Peng
Thönes, Ann-Kathrin
Ternes, Mario V.
Kohlstedt, Michael
Wittmann, Christoph
Sprache: Englisch
Titel: Metabolic Engineering
Bandnummer: 95
Seiten: 111-130
Verlag/Plattform: Elsevier
Erscheinungsjahr: 2026
Freie Schlagwörter: Corynebacterium glutamicum
Metabolic engineering
Glucose–xylose co-utilization
13 C-tracer analysis
Carbon catabolite repression
Network flux integration
Cardboard hydrolysate
Lysine production
DDC-Sachgruppe: 500 Naturwissenschaften
Dokumenttyp: Journalartikel / Zeitschriftenartikel
Abstract: Efficient co-utilization of glucose and xylose—the predominant sugars in lignocellulosic and paper-derived hydrolysates—remains a major bottleneck in microbial bioprocessing due to substrate hierarchy and carbon catabolite repression. Here, we develop a substrate-informed metabolic engineering framework in Corynebacte rium glutamicum that overcomes substrate hierarchy and carbon catabolite repression, enabling a balanced, largely transcription-independent glucose–xylose co-utilization regime at the level of central carbon metabolism. This regime is tailored to the sugar composition of cardboard hydrolysate (CBH), a waste-derived third-gener ation feedstock. A library of 34 engineered strains was constructed by systematically varying xylAB modules, transporter identity, promoter strength, and gene dosage. Integrated physiological, enzymatic, transcriptomic, and C-tracer analyses revealed strain XYL-6A as a representative of a distinct, kinetically balanced metabolic regime in which glucose- and xylose-derived fluxes merge early at the F6P/G3P node and maintain stable proportions independent of changing substrate levels or transcriptional adjustments. This regime arises from simple kinetic coordination of a compact, redox-neutral xylose-isomerase pathway with tuned transport capacity, eliminating the need for specialized feeding strategies, extensive regulatory rewiring, or attenuation of native glucose uptake. The optimized module translated directly into an industrial L-lysine producer, enabling high lysine yields from both defined mixtures and CBH (47.3 mmol C-mol 1 ). These results demonstrate how substrate-informed pathway design can exploit intrinsic network connectivity to achieve robust mixed-sugar metabolism. More broadly, they illustrate a core synthetic-biology principle: simple, well-balanced modules can generate scalable and reliable metabolic behaviors, providing a practical foundation for valorizing heterogeneous carbon feedstocks.
DOI der Erstveröffentlichung: 10.1016/j.ymben.2026.02.007
URL der Erstveröffentlichung: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymben.2026.02.007
Link zu diesem Datensatz: urn:nbn:de:bsz:291--ds-480447
hdl:20.500.11880/42022
http://dx.doi.org/10.22028/D291-48044
ISSN: 1096-7184
1096-7176
Datum des Eintrags: 15-Jun-2026
Bezeichnung des in Beziehung stehenden Objekts: Supplementary data
In Beziehung stehendes Objekt: https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1096717626000261-mmc1.docx
Fakultät: NT - Naturwissenschaftlich- Technische Fakultät
Fachrichtung: NT - Biowissenschaften
Professur: NT - Prof. Dr. Christoph Wittmann
Sammlung:SciDok - Der Wissenschaftsserver der Universität des Saarlandes

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Diese Ressource wurde unter folgender Copyright-Bestimmung veröffentlicht: Lizenz von Creative Commons Creative Commons