Summary
Knock out phdA, the gene encoding the acyl:CoA ligase (a 4‑coumarate:CoA ligase / phenylpropanoid‑CoA synthetase) that catalyzes the first committed step of phenylpropanoid catabolism in Corynebacterium glutamicum. Deleting phdA abolishes the CoA‑activation of p‑coumarate and thereby prevents its endogenous degradation, allowing p‑coumaric acid to accumulate.
Detailed Analysis
Why phdA? C. glutamicum harbors a chromosomal phd (phenylpropanoid degradation) gene cluster that enables the organism to use phenylpropanoids such as p‑coumarate, ferulate, and caffeate as carbon sources. Catabolism is initiated by PhdA, an acyl:CoA ligase that activates p‑coumarate to p‑coumaroyl‑CoA; subsequent enzymes (PhdB/C/D/E) feed the activated intermediate into β‑oxidation–like cleavage to yield 4‑hydroxybenzoyl‑CoA / 4‑hydroxybenzoate, which is funneled to the protocatechuate branch of the β‑ketoadipate pathway. Eliminating the very first step (PhdA) traps p‑coumarate as a dead‑end (from the cell's perspective) product. The dedicated phenylpropanoid importer PhdT is encoded in the same cluster but is not required to be deleted—indeed, it can be useful when p‑CA is taken up by a downstream consumer strain in co‑cultivation.
Direct experimental evidence. Kallscheuer et al. (2016, Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol.) identified the phd cluster and showed PhdA is the entry enzyme. Building on this, the recent Microbial Cell Factories study "Microbial synthesis of the plant natural product precursor p‑coumaric acid with C. glutamicum" (2023) explicitly demonstrates the engineering logic in the question:
- A wild‑type background expressing aroH (DAHP synthase, E. coli) plus talFj (tyrosine ammonia‑lyase, Flavobacterium johnsoniae) produced only ~75 mg/L p‑CA because it was rapidly consumed.
- Deletion of phdA in strain C. glutamicum p‑CA1 → p‑CA2 (ΔphdA) abolished p‑CA degradation and was the key step enabling product accumulation, ultimately leading (with further engineering) to 661 mg/L p‑CA.
- The authors note that the prior DelAro platform strains had retained phdA and phdT because their CoA‑activation/transport activities were useful for downstream polyphenol biosynthesis—which is precisely why phdA must be removed when p‑coumarate itself is the desired end product.
Bottom line: ΔphdA (loss of the p‑coumarate:CoA ligase that initiates phenylpropanoid catabolism) is the knockout that prevents degradation of p‑coumaric acid in engineered C. glutamicum.
Sources:
- Kubyshkin V. et al. (2023) "Microbial synthesis of the plant natural product precursor p‑coumaric acid with Corynebacterium glutamicum," Microbial Cell Factories 22:222. https://microbialcellfactories.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12934-023-02222-y
- Kallscheuer N. et al. (2016) "Identification of the phd gene cluster responsible for phenylpropanoid utilization in Corynebacterium glutamicum," Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 100:1871–1881. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00253-015-7165-1