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1.
Metab Eng ; 61: 369-380, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32717328

ABSTRACT

Engineering living cells for production of chemicals, enzymes and therapeutics can burden cells due to use of limited native co-factor availability and/or expression burdens, totalling a fitness deficit compared to parental cells encoded through long evolutionary trajectories to maximise fitness. Ultimately, this discrepancy puts a selective pressure against fitness-burdened engineered cells under prolonged bioprocesses, and potentially leads to complete eradication of high-performing engineered cells at the population level. Here we present the mutation landscapes of fitness-burdened yeast cells engineered for vanillin-ß-glucoside production. Next, we design synthetic control circuits based on transcriptome analysis and biosensors responsive to vanillin-ß-glucoside pathway intermediates in order to stabilize vanillin-ß-glucoside production over ~55 generations in sequential passage experiments. Furthermore, using biosensors with two different modes of action we identify control circuits linking vanillin-ß-glucoside pathway flux to various essential cellular functions, and demonstrate control circuits robustness and almost 2-fold higher vanillin-ß-glucoside production, including 5-fold increase in total vanillin-ß-glucoside pathway metabolite accumulation, in a fed-batch fermentation compared to vanillin-ß-glucoside producing cells without control circuits.


Subject(s)
Benzaldehydes/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Transcriptome , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism
2.
Metab Eng ; 45: 121-133, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29196124

ABSTRACT

Anaerobic industrial fermentation processes do not require aeration and intensive mixing and the accompanying cost savings are beneficial for production of chemicals and fuels. However, the free-energy conservation of fermentative pathways is often insufficient for the production and export of the desired compounds and/or for cellular growth and maintenance. To increase free-energy conservation during fermentation of the industrially relevant disaccharide sucrose by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we first replaced the native yeast α-glucosidases by an intracellular sucrose phosphorylase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides (LmSPase). Subsequently, we replaced the native proton-coupled sucrose uptake system by a putative sucrose facilitator from Phaseolus vulgaris (PvSUF1). The resulting strains grew anaerobically on sucrose at specific growth rates of 0.09 ± 0.02h-1 (LmSPase) and 0.06 ± 0.01h-1 (PvSUF1, LmSPase). Overexpression of the yeast PGM2 gene, which encodes phosphoglucomutase, increased anaerobic growth rates on sucrose of these strains to 0.23 ± 0.01h-1 and 0.08 ± 0.00h-1, respectively. Determination of the biomass yield in anaerobic sucrose-limited chemostat cultures was used to assess the free-energy conservation of the engineered strains. Replacement of intracellular hydrolase with a phosphorylase increased the biomass yield on sucrose by 31%. Additional replacement of the native proton-coupled sucrose uptake system by PvSUF1 increased the anaerobic biomass yield by a further 8%, resulting in an overall increase of 41%. By experimentally demonstrating an energetic benefit of the combined engineering of disaccharide uptake and cleavage, this study represents a first step towards anaerobic production of compounds whose metabolic pathways currently do not conserve sufficient free-energy.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins , Glucosyltransferases , Leuconostoc mesenteroides/genetics , Membrane Transport Proteins , Metabolic Engineering , Phaseolus/genetics , Plant Proteins , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Sucrose/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/biosynthesis , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biological Transport, Active/genetics , Glucosyltransferases/biosynthesis , Glucosyltransferases/genetics , Leuconostoc mesenteroides/enzymology , Membrane Transport Proteins/biosynthesis , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/biosynthesis , Plant Proteins/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism
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