Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering, Vol.98, No.3, 167-173, 2004
Production of vitamin B-12 in genetically engineered Propionibacterium freudenreichii
Since the chemical synthesis of vitamin 13, requires more than 70 steps, the production of vitamin B-12 has been achieved by microorganism fermentation with additional brief chemical modifications. In an effort to increase the productivity of vitamin B-12, we tried to express 10 genes belonging to the hem, cob and cbi gene families involved in the synthesis of vitamin B-12 in Propionibacterium freudenreichii, which is a known producer of vitamin B-12. In a recombinant P freudenreichii clone that harbored the expression vector containing a cobA, cbiLF, or cbiEGH, we obtained an increase in vitamin B, production of 1.7-, 1.9-, and 1.5-fold higher, respectively, than that in the microorganism without any cloned genes in the expression vector pPK705. The cobU and cobS genes caused a slight increase in the production of vitamin B-12. Furthermore, we achieved multigene expression in P freudenreichii. In a recombinant R freudenreichii clone that harbored an exogenous gene, hemA, from Rhodobacter sphaeroides and endogenous hemB and cobA genes, we successfully achieved the production of about 1.7 mg/l vitamin B-12, 2.2-fold higher than that produced by P. freudenreichii harboring pPK705.