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Enhancing menaquinone-7 biosynthesis through strengthening precursor supply and product secretion.

Menaquinone-7 (MK-7) is an important class of vitamin K2 that is essential in human health and can prevent osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. However, due to the complex synthesis pathway, the synthesis efficiency is low. The main objective of this study was to explore the effect of enhanced supply of precursors in Bacillus natto. Three precursors of pyruvate, shikimic acid, and sodium glutamate were chosen to investigate the effect of enhanced supply of precursors on MK-7 synthesis. Then, the optimal concentrations, different combinations, and different adding times were systematically studied, respectively. Results showed that the combination of shikimic acid and sodium glutamate could boost MK-7 production by 2 times, reaching 50 mg/L of MK-7 titer and 0.52 mg/(L·h) of MK-7 productivity. Furthermore, adding shikimic acid and sodium glutamate initially and feeding pyruvate at 48 h and 72 h increased MK-7 production to 58 mg/L. At the same time, the expression of the three related genes was also significantly upregulated. Subsequently, a new fermentation strategy combining the precursors enhancement and product secretion was proposed to enhance MK-7 yield and MK-7 productivity to 63 mg/L and 0.45 mg/(L·h). This study proposed a new fermentation regulation strategy for the enhancement of vitamin K2 biosynthesis.

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