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Quantitative analysis of aromatics for synthetic biology using liquid chromatography
Author(s) -
Lai Bin,
Plan Manuel R.,
Averesch Nils J.H.,
Yu Shiqin,
Kracke Frauke,
Lekieffre Nicolas,
Bydder Sarah,
Hodson Mark P.,
Winter Gal,
Krömer Jens O.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
biotechnology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.144
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1860-7314
pISSN - 1860-6768
DOI - 10.1002/biot.201600269
Subject(s) - high performance liquid chromatography , chemistry , metabolic engineering , chromatography , petrochemical , mass spectrometry , metabolic pathway , shikimate pathway , biochemistry , biosynthesis , enzyme , organic chemistry
The replacement of petrochemical aromatics with bio‐based molecules is a key area of current biotechnology research. To date, a small number of aromatics have been produced by recombinant bacteria in laboratory scale while industrial production still requires further strain development. While each study includes some distinct analytical methodology to quantify certain aromatics, a method that can reliably quantify a great number of aromatic products and relevant pathway intermediates is needed to accelerate strain development. In this study, we developed a robust reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography method to quantify a wide range of aromatic metabolites present in host microorganisms using the shikimate pathway, which is the major metabolic pathway for biosynthesis of aromatics. Twenty‐three metabolites can be quantified precisely with the optimized method using standard HPLC equipment and UV detection, with the mobile phase used for chromatography also compatible with mass spectrometry (MS). The limit of quantification/detection is as low as 10 −10 to 10 −13 mol, respectively, which makes this method feasible for quantification of intracellular metabolites. This method covers most metabolic routes for aromatics biosynthesis, it is inexpensive, robust, simple, precise and sensitive, and has been demonstrated on cell extracts from S. cerevisiae genetically engineered to overproduce aromatics.