A sustainable strategy for biosynthesis of Rebaudioside D using a novel
glycosyltransferase of Solanum tuberosum
Abstract
Bioconversion of Rebaudioside D faces high-cost obstacles. Herein, a
novel glycosyltransferase StUGT converting Rebaudioside A to
Rebaudioside D was screened and characterized, which exhibits stronger
affinity and substrate specificity for Rebaudioside A than previously
reported enzymes. A whole-cell catalytic system was thus developed using
the StUGT strain. The production of Rebaudioside D was enhanced
significantly by enhancing cell permeability, and the highest production
of 6.12 g/L (yield=98.08%) by cell catalyst was obtained by
statistical-based optimization. A new cascade process utilizing this
recombinant strain and E. coli expressing sucrose synthase was further
established to reduce cost through replacing expensive UDPG with
sucrose. A StUGT-GsSUS1 system exhibited high catalytic capability, and
5.27 g/L Rebaudioside D was achieved finally without UDPG addition by
systematic optimization. This is the best performance reported in
cell-cascaded biosynthesis, which paves a new cost-effective strategy
for sustainable synthesis of scarce premium sweeteners from biomass.