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Item Open Access Compartment‐specific 13C metabolic flux analysis reveals boosted NADPH availability coinciding with increased cell‐specific productivity for IgG1 producing CHO cells after MTA treatment(2021) Wijaya, Andy Wiranata; Verhagen, Natascha; Teleki, Attila; Takors, RalfIncreasing cell‐specific productivities (CSPs) for the production of heterologous proteins in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells is an omnipresent need in the biopharmaceutical industry. The novel additive 5′‐deoxy‐5′‐(methylthio)adenosine (MTA), a chemical degradation product of S‐(5′‐adenosyl)‐ʟ‐methionine (SAM) and intermediate of polyamine biosynthesis, boosts the CSP of IgG1‐producing CHO cells by 50%. Compartment‐specific 13C flux analysis revealed a fundamental reprogramming of the central metabolism after MTA addition accompanied by cell‐cycle arrest and increased cell volumes. Carbon fluxes into the pentose‐phosphate pathway increased 22 fold in MTA‐treated cells compared to that in non‐MTA‐treated reference cells. Most likely, cytosolic ATP inhibition of phosphofructokinase mediated the carbon detour. Mitochondrial shuttle activity of the α‐ketoglurarate/malate antiporter (OGC) reversed, reducing cytosolic malate transport. In summary, NADPH supply in MTA‐treated cells improved three fold compared to that in non‐MTA‐treated cells, which can be regarded as a major factor for explaining the boosted CSPs.Item Open Access Systemic intracellular analysis for balancing complex biosynthesis in a transcriptionally deregulated Escherichia coli l‐Methionine producer(2024) Harting, Claudia; Teleki, Attila; Braakmann, Marius; Jankowitsch, Frank; Takors, Ralfl-Methionine (l-Met) has gained remarkable interest due to its multifaceted and versatile applications in the fields of nutrition, pharmaceuticals and clinical practice. In this study, the fluxes of the challenging l-Met biosynthesis in the producer strain Escherichia coli (E. coli) DM2853 were fine-tuned to enable improved l-Met production. The potential bottlenecks identified in sulfur assimilation and l-Met synthesis downstream of O-succinyl-l-homoserine (OSHS) were addressed by overexpressing glutaredoxin 1 (grxA), thiosulfate sulfurtransferase (pspE) and O-succinylhomoserine lyase (metB). Although deemed as a straightforward target for improving glucose-to-Met conversion, the yields remained at approximately 12%-13% (g/g). Instead, intracellular l-Met pools increased by up to four-fold with accelerated kinetics. Overexpression of the Met exporter ygaZH may serve as a proper valve for releasing the rising internal Met pressure. Interestingly, the export kinetics revealed maximum saturated export rates already at low growth rates. This scenario is particularly advantageous for large-scale fermentation when product formation is ideally uncoupled from biomass formation to achieve maximum performance within the technical limits of large-scale bioreactors.