Exploring Cell-Free Systems for Enhanced Synthesis of Hyaluronic Acid

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

Zhi Yuan Yao (Jiangnan University)

Jin Song Gong (Jiangnan University)

Xiongyan Yang (Central South University China)

Jiancheng Shen (Jiangnan University)

Min Jun Yu (Jiangnan University)

Chang Su (Jiangnan University)

Heng Li (Jiangnan University)

Frank Hollmann (TU Delft - Applied Sciences)

Zheng Hong Xu (Jiangnan University, Sichuan University)

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Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.5c08932 Final published version
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
Journal title
ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
Issue number
46
Volume number
13
Pages (from-to)
20194-20203
Downloads counter
111
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Abstract

Hyaluronic acid (HA), a linear polysaccharide composed of alternating β-1,3-glucuronic acid (GlcA) and β-1,4-N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) disaccharide units, is widely utilized in food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic industries. Conventional in vitro HA biosynthesis is hindered by the reliance on costly nucleotide sugar precursors (UDP-GlcA and UDP-GlcNAc) and inefficient multienzyme coordination. To address these challenges, this study established a cell-free enzymatic cascade system integrating HA de novo synthesis with nucleotide recycling through eight pathway enzymes. By leveraging nucleotide sugar salvage pathways, UDP-GlcA and UDP-GlcNAc were efficiently synthesized from inexpensive monosaccharides, thereby bypassing energy-intensive de novo routes. Soluble expression of Pasteurella multocida hyaluronan synthase (PmHAS) was achieved by truncating its membrane-associated domains to enable sequential glycosyl transferase activity in aqueous systems. A dual ATP/UTP regeneration strategy was further implemented to sustain nucleotide supply, eliminating costly downstream purification. Under optimized conditions, the system produced 1.28 g/L HA within 24 h, with a molecular weight range of 1.28 × 104to 1.02 × 106Da and a substrate conversion yield of 65.9%. This work not only provides an economical platform for scalable HA synthesis but also establishes a modular enzymatic blueprint for engineering complex biopolymers, demonstrating broad applicability in synthetic glycobiology.

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