Triacylglycerol accumulation in Rhodococcus opacus DSM 43205 from Knallgas and Knallgas-derived soluble intermediates

Araya, Blanca; Torres-Praderio, Paz; Conejeros, Raul; Vergara-Fernandez, Alberto; Scott, Felipe

Abstract

Rhodococcus opacus DSM 43205 combines broad substrate versatility with autotrophic growth on Knallgas (H-2/O-2/CO2), making it a promising chassis for carbon-efficient triacylglycerol (TAG) production. We quantified growth, intracellular TAG content, yields, specific productivities, and fatty-acid profiles during nitrogen-limited accumulation on Knallgas and Knallgas-derived intermediates (methanol, acetate, 1-propanol, butyrate, valerate); glucose served as a reference. Acetate yielded the highest TAG content (0.580 +/- 0.095 g gCDW(-)(1)) and approached its theoretical maximum (96 %), whereas methanol (0.305 +/- 0.014) and Knallgas (0.325 +/- 0.047) were lowest. Propanol and valerate drove > 80 % odd-chain fatty acids via propionyl-CoA priming. A reduced central-metabolism flux balance analysis (FBA) model reproduced substrate-specific NADPH strategies and guided engineering hypotheses: a RuMP cycle for methanol raised the theoretical TAG yield to 0.327 g g(-)(1) ; bypassing pyruvate decarboxylation and expression of a NAD(P)(+) dependent transhydrogenase under Knallgas further improved hydrogen yields to 1.083 g g(-1). Extending the system boundary to upstream chemical synthesis showed that producing 1 kg TAG required 0.95 kg H-2 and 8.64 kg CO2 via acetate, versus 2.56 kg H-2 and 5.95 kg CO2 for direct Knallgas fermentation. The most efficient H-2 utilization was predicted for methanol using the RuMP cycle (0.62 kg H-2 per kg TAG). Increases in TAG-free biomass and direct assays revealed substantial cell-bound carbohydrate and soluble EPS formation on glucose and Knallgas. Quantitatively explaining differences between experimental and theoretical yields. The curated FBA model and Escher-ready map are released openly, enabling community-driven metabolic engineering and process design for carbon-negative lipids.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:001659679300004 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Volumen: 14
Número: 1
Editorial: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2026
DOI:

10.1016/j.jece.2025.120959

Notas: ISI