Protein Information

ID 478
Name formaldehyde dehydrogenase
Synonyms ADH 3; ADH 5; ADH5; ADH5 protein; ADHX; Alcohol dehydrogenase 5; Alcohol dehydrogenase class 3 chi chain; Alcohol dehydrogenase class III chi chain…

Compound Information

ID 348
Name formaldehyde
CAS formaldehyde

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
18378663 Baerends RJ, de Hulster E, Geertman JM, Daran JM, van Maris AJ, Veenhuis M, van der Klei IJ, Pronk JT: Engineering and analysis of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain that uses formaldehyde as an auxiliary substrate. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2008 May;74(10):3182-8. Epub 2008 Mar 31.
We demonstrated that formaldehyde can be efficiently coutilized by an engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain that expresses Hansenula polymorpha genes encoding formaldehyde dehydrogenase (FLD1) and formate dehydrogenase (FMD), in contrast to wild-type strains. Initial chemostat experiments showed that the engineered strain coutilized formaldehyde with glucose, but these mixed-substrate cultures failed to reach steady-state conditions and did not exhibit an increased biomass yield on glucose. Subsequent transcriptome analyses of chemostat cultures of the engineered strain, grown on glucose-formaldehyde mixtures, indicated that the presence of formaldehyde in the feed caused biotin limitations. Further transcriptome analysis demonstrated that this biotin inactivation was prevented by using separate formaldehyde and vitamin feeds. Using this approach, steady-state glucose-limited chemostat cultures were obtained that coutilized glucose and formaldehyde. Coutilization of formaldehyde under these conditions resulted in an enhanced biomass yield of the glucose-limited cultures. The biomass yield was quantitatively consistent with the use of formaldehyde as an auxiliary substrate that generates NADH and subsequently, via oxidative phosphorylation, ATP. On an electron pair basis, the biomass yield increase observed with formaldehyde was larger than that observed previously for formate, which is tentatively explained by different modes of formate and formaldehyde transport in S. cerevisiae.
6(0,0,1,1)