Patent classifications
C12Y207/08007
PRODUCTION OF FATTY ACID DERIVATIVES
The invention relates to compositions and methods, including polynucleotide sequences, amino acid sequences, recombinant host cells and recombinant host cell cultures engineered to produce fatty acid derivative compositions comprising fatty acids, fatty alcohols, fatty aldehydes, fatty esters, alkanes, terminal olefins, internal olefins or ketones. The fatty acid derivative composition is produced extracellularly with a higher titer, yield or productivity than the corresponding wild type or non-engineered host cell.
PRODUCTION OF CANNABINOIDS
The present disclosure relates to the production of cannabinoids in either recombinant microorganism or in cell-free systems using a combination of enzymes, including but not limited to a PKS enzyme, a npgA enzyme, a cs-OLAS-1, a pp-DVAS-1, a cs-HEX-1 and/or Butiryl synthase.
GENETICALLY MODIFIED MICROORGANISM AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING DIAMINE COMPOUND
Provided are a microorganism that produces a diamine compound and a method of producing a diamine compound.
The genetically modified microorganism expresses an enzyme involved in synthesis of a diamine compound, in which the diamine compound is represented by Formula: H.sub.2N—R—NH.sub.2 (wherein, R is a chain or cyclic organic group comprised of one or more atoms selected from the group consisting of C, H, O, N, and S), and the genetically modified microorganism is modified to reduce an activity of an alcohol dehydrogenase compared to a non-reduced strain.
HUMAN GUT MICROBIOME-DERIVED BIOSYNTHETIC ENZYMES FOR PRODUCTION OF FATTY ACID AMIDES
Disclosed herein, in some embodiments, are vectors encoding biosynthetic enzymes from gut microbiome-derived bacterium (e.g., Clostridia enzymes), engineered cells comprising the vectors, and methods of using biosynthetic enzymes from gut microbiome-derived bacterium (e.g., Clostridia enzymes) to produce fatty acid amides.
CYANOBACTERIAL HOSTS AND METHODS FOR PRODUCING CHEMICALS
The present invention relates to recombinant cyanobacterial cells for the production of a chemical compound of interest. In particular, the present invention relates to genetic modifications that introduce one or more heterologous phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases) into a cyanobacterial cell. These cells can, optionally, further comprise heterologous carrier protein and nucleic acid constructs that provide the cyanobacterial cells with the capability of producing chemicals of interest or compounds of interest, such secondary metabolites polyketides, nonribosomal peptides and their hybrids, the three major families of bioactive natural products, of cyanobacteria and other bacterial phyla, secondary metabolites analogs, and unnatural compounds.
Producing amines and diamines from a carboxylic acid or dicarboxylic acid or a monoester thereof
The invention relates to a whole-cell catalyst which expresses a recombinant α-dioxygenase or the combination of a recombinant fatty acid reductase and a phosphopantetheinyl transferase which phosphopantetheinylates the fatty acid reductase, and which expresses, in addition to the α-dioxygenase and/or the combination of fatty acid reductase and phosphopantetheinyl transferase, a transaminase, wherein the phosphopantetheinyl transferase and/or transaminase is preferably recombinant; and also to a process for converting a carboxylic acid or dicarboxylic acid or a monoester thereof to an amine or diamine, comprising the steps of contacting the carboxylic acid or dicarboxylic acid or the monoester thereof with a phosphopantetheinylated fatty acid reductase or an α-dioxygenase and contacting the product with a transaminase.
COMPOSTITIONS AND METHODS FOR RECOMBINANT BIOSYNTHESIS OF PROPANE
Provided are genetically engineered microorganism that catalyze the synthesis of propane and/or butanol from a suitable substrate such as glucose. Also provided are methods of engineering said genetically engineered microorganism and methods of producing propane and/or butanol using the genetically engineered microorganism.
Biological control of crown gall disease on grapevines
Derivatives of Agrobacterium vitis strain F2/5 are disclosed. These derivatives were generated following homologous recombination with an internal fragment of targeted genes resulting in gene disruption by insertion of a copy of suicide vector pVIK165. The genes disrupted were F-avi5813 encoding a phosphopantetheinyltransferase, F-avi4329 encoding an aminotransferase and F-avi0838 (rirA) encoding an iron responsive transcriptional regulator. Such derivatives control crown gall on grapevines. In addition, these derivatives did not induce roots necrosis but enhanced root development and callus formation. On young stem explants, it was shown as well that the F2/5 derivatives are necrosis-negative.
Cyanobacterial hosts and methods for producing chemicals
The present invention relates to recombinant cyanobacterial cells for the production of a chemical compound of interest. In particular, the present invention relates to genetic modifications that introduce one or more heterologous phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases) into a cyanobacterial cell. These cells can, optionally, further comprise heterologous carrier protein and nucleic acid constructs that provide the cyanobacterial cells with the capability of producing chemicals of interest or compounds of interest, such secondary metabolites polyketides, nonribosomal peptides and their hybrids, the three major families of bioactive natural products, of cyanobacteria and other bacterial phyla, secondary metabolites analogs, and unnatural compounds.
TRANSGENIC METHOD OF OBTAINING BLUE FLOWERS BY CATALYZING GLUTAMINE TO SYNTHESIZE INDIGO
A transgenic method of obtaining blue flowers by catalyzing glutamine to synthesize indigo is provided. The steps thereof comprise: 1) respectively cloning a Sfp gene encoding phosphopantetheinyl transferase and a bpsA gene encoding indigo synthase downstream of a plant promoter in a plant-promoter-containing plasmid; 2) amplifying the obtained plasmid in E. coli and then transferring the same to Agrobacterium tumefaciens; and 3) transferring DNA containing Sfp and bpsA into a plant. The blue flowers produced by the present invention have various characteristics of natural flowers, being fresh, flower-scented, non-color-fading, and non-toxic. The transgene-encoded enzyme and the produced indigo are not in the vacuole and are not affected by the low pH of the plant vacuole, thereby resulting in a pure blue color. The precursor of the blue matter, i.e., the substrate of the enzyme, is glutamine, which is abundant in plants. The enzyme catalysis reaction comprises a single step, and the transgenic transformation can be carried out on natural white flowers.