Illinois Data Bank

Data for Engineering and Evolution of Yarrowia lipolytica for Producing Lipids from Lignocellulosic Hydrolysates

Yarrowia lipolytica, an oleaginous yeast, shows promise for industrial fermentation due to its robust acetyl-CoA flux and well-developed genetic engineering tools. However, its lack of an active xylose metabolism restricts the conversion of cellulosic sugars to valuable products. To address this, metabolic engineering, and adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE) were applied to the Y. lipolytica PO1f strain, resulting in an efficient xylose-assimilating strain (XEV). Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of the XEV followed by reverse engineering revealed that the amplification of the heterologous oxidoreductase pathway and a mutation in the GTPase-activating protein gene (YALI0B12100g) might be the primary reasons for improved xylose assimilation in the XEV strain. When a sorghum hydrolysate was used, the XEV strain showed superior xylose consumption and lipid production compared to its parental strain (X123). This study advances our understanding of xylose metabolism in Y. lipolytica and proposes effective metabolic engineering strategies for optimizing lignocellulosic hydrolysates.

Life Sciences
Hydrolysate; Lipids; Metabolic Engineering
CC BY
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)-Grant:DE-SC0018420
Yong-Su Jin
Version DOI Comment Publication Date
1 10.13012/B2IDB-8720632_V1 2026-05-14

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Dataset update: {"all_medusa"=>[nil, true]} 2026-05-14T21:25:12Z
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