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Dive into the research topics where Liujing Wei is active.

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Featured researches published by Liujing Wei.


Bioresource Technology | 2016

Heterologous production of α-farnesene in metabolically engineered strains of Yarrowia lipolytica.

Xia Yang; Komi Nambou; Liujing Wei; Qiang Hua

Herein, we studied the heterologous production of α-farnesene, a valuable sesquiterpene with various biotechnological applications, by metabolic engineering of Yarrowia lipolytica. Different overexpression vectors harboring combinations of tHMG1, IDI, ERG20 and codon-optimized α-farnesene synthase (OptFS) genes were constructed and integrated into the genome of Y. lipolytica Po1h. The engineered strain produced 57.08±1.43mg/L of α-farnesene corresponding to 20.8-fold increase over the initial production of 2.75±0.29mg/L in the YPD medium in shake flasks. Bioreactor scale-up in PM medium led to α-farnesene concentration of 259.98±2.15mg/L with α-farnesene to biomass ratio of 33.98±1.51mg/g, which was a 94.5-fold increase over the initial production. This first report on α-farnesene synthesis in Y. lipolytica lays a foundation for future research on production of sesquitepenes in Y. lipolytica and other closest yeast species and will potentially contribute in its industrial production.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Membrane-Bound Pyrroloquinoline Quinone-Dependent Dehydrogenase in Gluconobacter oxydans M5, Responsible for Production of 6-(2-Hydroxyethyl) Amino-6-Deoxy-l-Sorbose

Xuepeng Yang; Liujing Wei; Jinping Lin; Bo Yin; Dongzhi Wei

ABSTRACT A membrane-bound protein purified from Gluconobacter oxydans M5 was confirmed to be a pyrroloquinoline quinone-dependent d-sorbitol dehydrogenase. Gene disruption and complementation experiments demonstrated that this enzyme is responsible for the oxidation of 1-(2-hydroxyethyl) amino-1-deoxy-d-sorbitol (1NSL) to 6-(2-hydroxyethyl) amino-6-deoxy-l-sorbose (6NSE), which is the precursor of an antidiabetic drug, miglitol.


Bioresource Technology | 2012

Combining metabolic engineering and adaptive evolution to enhance the production of dihydroxyacetone from glycerol by Gluconobacter oxydans in a low-cost way.

Leifang Lu; Liujing Wei; Kun Zhu; Dongzhi Wei; Qiang Hua

Gluconobacter oxydans can rapidly and effectively transform glycerol to dihydroxyacetone (DHA) by membrane-bound quinoprotein sorbitol dehydrogenase (mSLDH). Two mutant strains of GDHE Δadh pBBR-PtufBsldAB and GDHE Δadh pBBR-sldAB derived from the GDHE strain were constructed for the enhancement of DHA production. Growth performances of both strains were largely improved after adaptively growing in the medium with glucose as the sole carbon source. The resulting GAT and GAN strains exhibited better catalytic property than the GDHE strain in the presence of a high concentration of glycerol. All strains of GDHE, GAT and GAN cultivated on glucose showed enhanced catalytic capacity than those grown on sorbitol, indicating a favorable prospect of using glucose as carbon source to reduce the cost in industrial production. It was also the first time to reveal that the expression level of the sldAB gene in glucose-growing strains were higher than that of the strains cultivated on sorbitol.


Bioresource Technology | 2014

Designing of a "cheap to run" fermentation platform for an enhanced production of single cell oil from Yarrowia lipolytica DSM3286 as a potential feedstock for biodiesel.

Komi Nambou; Chen Zhao; Liujing Wei; Jun Chen; Tadayuki Imanaka; Qiang Hua

In this study, the culture medium components screening and filtering were undertaken in order to set up efficient and cost effective minimal culture media for lipid production from Yarrowia lipolytica DSM3286. The basal minimal culture medium (S2) designed yielded lipid content up to 35% of the microbial dry cell weight. A set of fermentation strategies based on this minimal medium was developed and the lipid content was raised to 51%. The scale-up under different fermentation conditions based on S2 medium led to a maximum lipid content of 65%. The produced microbial oils displayed interesting properties to be used as a feedstock for high quality biodiesel production. The minimal media and operable cultivation strategies devised in this study, in association with the works done so far by other authors, could enable fast, massive, viable and more economical production of single cell oils and smooth biodiesel manufacture.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2015

Metabolome analysis and pathway abundance profiling of Yarrowia lipolytica cultivated on different carbon sources.

Chen Zhao; Deqing Gu; Komi Nambou; Liujing Wei; Jun Chen; Tadayuki Imanaka; Qiang Hua

Yarrowia lipolytica, a model microorganism of oleaginous yeasts with developed sophisticated genetic tools, is able to metabolize a wide range of substrates and accumulate large amounts of lipids. However, there is a lack of literature reporting the metabolic characteristics of Y. lipolytica metabolizing these substrates in a systematic view. In this study, Y. lipolytica was cultivated on a variety of carbon sources, among which cell growth and production characteristics on two representative substrates (glucose and oleic acid) were investigated in detail at metabolomic level. Metabolic pathway abundance was computed to interpret the metabolome data in a straightforward way. The results showed that most pathway abundances decreased in the shift from growth to production phase. Specifically, when cultivated on glucose, abundances of twelve pathways decreased markedly between the growth and lipid production phases, while thirteen pathways reduced and only three pathways increased significantly in abundances on oleic acid. In comparison, for the same cultivation phase only a few pathways exhibited significant changes between glucose-grown and oleic acid-grown cells. This study revealed that the pathway abundance could be used to effectively show the activity changes of pathways, providing a new perspective to employ metabolomics data for understanding cell metabolism and enhancing the production of target metabolites.


Molecular Biotechnology | 2010

Characterization of Enzymes in the Oxidation of 1,2-Propanediol to d-(−)-Lactic Acid by Gluconobacter oxydans DSM 2003

Liujing Wei; Xuepeng Yang; Keliang Gao; Jinping Lin; Shengli Yang; Qiang Hua; Dongzhi Wei

Although Gluconobacter oxydans can convert 1,2-propanediol to d-(−)-lactic acid, the enzyme(s) responsible for the conversion has remain unknown. In this study, the membrane-bound alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) of Gluconobacter oxydans DSM 2003 was purified and confirmed to be essential for the process of d-(−)-lactic acid production by gene knockout and complementation studies. A 25 percent decrease in d-(−)-lactic acid production was found for the aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) deficient strain of G. oxydans DSM 2003, indicating that this enzyme is involved in the reaction but not necessary. It is the first report that reveals the function of ADH and ALDH in the biooxidation of 1,2-propanediol to d-(−)-lactic acid by G. oxydans DSM 2003.


Metabolites | 2015

Flux Balance Analysis Inspired Bioprocess Upgrading for Lycopene Production by a Metabolically Engineered Strain of Yarrowia lipolytica

Komi Nambou; Xingxing Jian; Xinkai Zhang; Liujing Wei; Jiajia Lou; Catherine Madzak; Qiang Hua

Genome-scale metabolic models embody a significant advantage of systems biology since their applications as metabolic flux simulation models enable predictions for the production of industrially-interesting metabolites. The biotechnological production of lycopene from Yarrowia lipolytica is an emerging scope that has not been fully scrutinized, especially for what concerns cultivation conditions of newly generated engineered strains. In this study, by combining flux balance analysis (FBA) and Plackett-Burman design, we screened chemicals for lycopene production from a metabolically engineered strain of Y. lipolytica. Lycopene concentrations of 126 and 242 mg/L were achieved correspondingly from the FBA-independent and the FBA-assisted designed media in fed-batch cultivation mode. Transcriptional studies revealed upregulations of heterologous genes in media designed according to FBA, thus implying the efficiency of model predictions. Our study will potentially support upgraded lycopene and other terpenoids production from existing or prospect bioengineered strains of Y. lipolytica and/or closely related yeast species.


Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2013

Genetic analysis of D-xylose metabolism pathways in Gluconobacter oxydans 621H

Minhua Zhang; Liujing Wei; Yi Zhou; Liqin Du; Tadayuki Imanaka; Qiang Hua

D-xylose is one of the most abundant carbohydrates in nature. This work focuses on xylose metabolism of Gluconobacter oxydans as revealed by a few studies conducted to understand xylose utilization by this strain. Interestingly, the G. oxydans 621H Δmgdh strain (deficient in membrane-bound glucose dehydrogenase) was greatly inhibited when grown on xylose and no xylonate accumulation was observed in the medium. These experimental observations suggested that the mgdh gene was responsible for the conversion of xylose to xylonate in G. oxydans, which was also verified by whole-cell biotransformation. Since 621H Δmgdh could still grow on xylose in a very small way, two seemingly important genes in the oxo-reductive pathway for xylose metabolism, a xylitol dehydrogenase-encoding gox0865 (xdh) gene and a putative xylulose kinase-encoding gox2214 (xk) gene, were knocked out to investigate the effects of both genes on xylose metabolism. The results showed that the gox2214 gene was not involved in xylose metabolism, and there might be other genes encoding xylulose kinase. Though the gox0865 gene played a less important role in xylose metabolism compared to the mgdh gene, it was significant in xylitol utilization in G. oxydans, which meant that gox0865 was a necessary gene for the oxo-reductive pathway of xylose in vivo. To sum up, when xylose was used as the carbon source, the majority of xylose was directly oxidized to xylonate for further metabolism in G. oxydans, whereas only a minor part of xylose was metabolized by the oxo-reductive pathway.


Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering | 2012

Functions of Membrane-bound Alcohol Dehydrogenase and Aldehyde Dehydrogenase in the Bio-oxidation of Alcohols in Gluconobacter oxydans DSM 2003

Liujing Wei; Jilai Zhou; Danni Zhu; Bai-yi Cai; Jinping Lin; Qiang Hua; Dongzhi Wei

In this study a new insight was provided to understand the functions of membrane-bound alcohol dehydrogenase (mADH) and aldehyde dehydrogenase (mALDH) in the bio-oxidation of primary alcohols, diols and poly alcohols using the resting cells of Gluconobacter oxydans DSM 2003 and its mutant strains as catalyst. The results demonstrated that though both mADH and mALDH participated in most of the oxidation of alcohols to their corresponding acid, the exact roles of these enzymes in each reaction might be different. For example, mADH played a key role in the oxidation of diols to its corresponding organic acid in G. oxydans, but it was dispensable when the primary alcohols were used as substrates. In contrast to mADH, mALDH appears to play a relatively minor role in organic acid-producing reactions because of the possible presence of other isoenzymes. Aldehydes were, however, found to be accumulated in the mALDH-deficient strain during the oxidation of alcohols.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008

A pyrroloquinoline quinine-dependent membrane-bound d-sorbitol dehydrogenase from Gluconobacter oxydans exhibits an ordered Bi Bi reaction mechanism

Xue-Peng Yang; Liujing Wei; Jian-Bin Ye; Bo Yin; Dongzhi Wei

A membrane-bound pyrroloquinoline quinine (PQQ)-dependent D-sorbitol dehydrogenase (mSLDH) in Gluconobacter oxydans participates in the oxidation of D-sorbitol to L-sorbose by transferring electrons to ubiquinone which links to the respiratory chain. To elucidate the kinetic mechanism, the enzyme purified was subjected to two-substrate steady-state kinetic analysis, product and substrate inhibition studies. These kinetic data indicate that the catalytic reaction follows an ordered Bi Bi mechanism, where the substrates bind to the enzyme in a defined order (first ubiquinone followed by D-sorbitol), while products are released in sequence (first L-sorbose followed by ubiquinol). From these findings, we proposed that the native mSLDH bears two different substrate-binding sites, one for ubiquinone and the other for D-sorbitol, in addition to PQQ-binding and Mg(2+)-binding sites in the catalytic center.

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Qiang Hua

East China University of Science and Technology

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Tadayuki Imanaka

East China University of Science and Technology

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Dongzhi Wei

East China University of Science and Technology

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Jun Chen

East China University of Science and Technology

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Komi Nambou

East China University of Science and Technology

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Yuxiang Fan

East China University of Science and Technology

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Jinping Lin

East China University of Science and Technology

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Chen Zhao

East China University of Science and Technology

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Fengxian Hu

East China University of Science and Technology

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Bo Yin

East China University of Science and Technology

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