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1.
J Hazard Mater ; 466: 133573, 2024 Mar 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38306834

RÉSUMÉ

Biosourced and biodegradable plastics offer a promising solution to reduce environmental impacts of plastics for specific applications. Here, we report a novel bacterium named Alteromonas plasticoclasticus MED1 isolated from the marine plastisphere that forms biofilms on foils of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV). Experiments of degradation halo, plastic matrix weight loss, bacterial oxygen consumption and heterotrophic biosynthetic activity showed that the bacterial isolate MED1 is able to degrade PHBV and to use it as carbon and energy source. The likely entire metabolic pathway specifically expressed by this bacterium grown on PHBV matrices was shown by further genomic and transcriptomic analysis. In addition to a gene coding for a probable secreted depolymerase, a gene cluster was located that encodes characteristic enzymes involved in the complete depolymerization of PHBV, the transport of oligomers, and in the conversion of the monomers into intermediates of central carbon metabolism. The transcriptomic experiments showed the activation of the glyoxylate shunt during PHBV degradation, setting the isocitrate dehydrogenase activity as regulated branching point of the carbon flow entering the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Our study also shows the potential of exploring the natural plastisphere to discover new bacteria with promising metabolic capabilities.


Sujet(s)
Bactéries , Polyesters , Bactéries/génétique , Bactéries/métabolisme , Hydroxy-butyrates , Biopolymères , Carbone/métabolisme
2.
Metab Eng ; 72: 200-214, 2022 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35341982

RÉSUMÉ

The reductive glycine pathway was described as the most energetically favorable synthetic route of aerobic formate assimilation. Here we report the successful implementation of formatotrophy in Escherichia coli by means of a stepwise adaptive evolution strategy. Medium swap and turbidostat regimes of continuous culture were applied to force the channeling of carbon flux through the synthetic pathway to pyruvate establishing growth on formate and CO2 as sole carbon sources. Labeling with 13C-formate proved the assimilation of the C1 substrate via the pathway metabolites. Genetic analysis of intermediate isolates revealed a mutational path followed throughout the adaptation process. Mutations were detected affecting the copy number (gene ftfL) or the coding sequence (genes folD and lpd) of genes which specify enzymes implicated in the three steps forming glycine from formate and CO2, the central metabolite of the synthetic pathway. The mutation R191S present in methylene-tetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase/cyclohydrolase (FolD) abolishes the inhibition of cyclohydrolase activity by the substrate formyl-tetrahydrofolate. The mutation R273H in lipoamide dehydrogenase (Lpd) alters substrate affinities as well as kinetics at physiological substrate concentrations likely favoring a reactional shift towards lipoamide reduction. In addition, genetic reconstructions proved the necessity of all three mutations for formate assimilation by the adapted cells. The largely unpredictable nature of these changes demonstrates the usefulness of the evolutionary approach enabling the selection of adaptive mutations crucial for pathway engineering of biotechnological model organisms.


Sujet(s)
Dioxyde de carbone , Escherichia coli , Biocatalyse , Dioxyde de carbone/métabolisme , Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Formiates/métabolisme , Glycine/métabolisme
3.
Biodes Res ; 2022: 9859643, 2022.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37850128

RÉSUMÉ

All living organisms share similar reactions within their central metabolism to provide precursors for all essential building blocks and reducing power. To identify whether alternative metabolic routes of glycolysis can operate in E. coli, we complementarily employed in silico design, rational engineering, and adaptive laboratory evolution. First, we used a genome-scale model and identified two potential pathways within the metabolic network of this organism replacing canonical Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas (EMP) glycolysis to convert phosphosugars into organic acids. One of these glycolytic routes proceeds via methylglyoxal and the other via serine biosynthesis and degradation. Then, we implemented both pathways in E. coli strains harboring defective EMP glycolysis. Surprisingly, the pathway via methylglyoxal seemed to immediately operate in a triosephosphate isomerase deletion strain cultivated on glycerol. By contrast, in a phosphoglycerate kinase deletion strain, the overexpression of methylglyoxal synthase was necessary to restore growth of the strain. Furthermore, we engineered the "serine shunt" which converts 3-phosphoglycerate via serine biosynthesis and degradation to pyruvate, bypassing an enolase deletion. Finally, to explore which of these alternatives would emerge by natural selection, we performed an adaptive laboratory evolution study using an enolase deletion strain. Our experiments suggest that the evolved mutants use the serine shunt. Our study reveals the flexible repurposing of metabolic pathways to create new metabolite links and rewire central metabolism.

4.
mBio ; 12(4): e0032921, 2021 08 31.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34399608

RÉSUMÉ

The nicotinamide cofactor specificity of enzymes plays a key role in regulating metabolic processes and attaining cellular homeostasis. Multiple studies have used enzyme engineering tools or a directed evolution approach to switch the cofactor preference of specific oxidoreductases. However, whole-cell adaptation toward the emergence of novel cofactor regeneration routes has not been previously explored. To address this challenge, we used an Escherichia coli NADPH-auxotrophic strain. We continuously cultivated this strain under selective conditions. After 500 to 1,100 generations of adaptive evolution using different carbon sources, we isolated several strains capable of growing without an external NADPH source. Most isolated strains were found to harbor a mutated NAD+-dependent malic enzyme (MaeA). A single mutation in MaeA was found to switch cofactor specificity while lowering enzyme activity. Most mutated MaeA variants also harbored a second mutation that restored the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. Remarkably, the best MaeA variants identified this way displayed overall superior kinetics relative to the wild-type variant with NAD+. In other evolved strains, the dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (Lpd) was mutated to accept NADP+, thus enabling the pyruvate dehydrogenase and 2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes to regenerate NADPH. Interestingly, no other central metabolism oxidoreductase seems to evolve toward reducing NADP+, which we attribute to several biochemical constraints, including unfavorable thermodynamics. This study demonstrates the potential and biochemical limits of evolving oxidoreductases within the cellular context toward changing cofactor specificity, further showing that long-term adaptive evolution can optimize enzyme activity beyond what is achievable via rational design or directed evolution using small libraries. IMPORTANCE In the cell, NAD(H) and NADP(H) cofactors have different functions. The former mainly accepts electrons from catabolic reactions and carries them to respiration, while the latter provides reducing power for anabolism. Correspondingly, the ratio of the reduced to the oxidized form differs for NAD+ (low) and NADP+ (high), reflecting their distinct roles. We challenged the flexibility of E. coli's central metabolism in multiple adaptive evolution experiments using an NADPH-auxotrophic strain. We found several mutations in two enzymes, changing the cofactor preference of malic enzyme and dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase. Upon deletion of their corresponding genes we performed additional evolution experiments which did not lead to the emergence of any additional mutants. We attribute this restricted number of mutational targets to intrinsic thermodynamic barriers; the high ratio of NADPH to NADP+ limits metabolic redox reactions that can regenerate NADPH, mainly by mass action constraints.


Sujet(s)
Coenzymes/métabolisme , Escherichia coli/enzymologie , Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Évolution moléculaire , NADP/métabolisme , Oxidoreductases/métabolisme , Carbone/métabolisme , Coenzymes/génétique , Escherichia coli/génétique , Protéines Escherichia coli , Cinétique , Malate dehydrogenase/métabolisme , NAD/métabolisme , Oxidoreductases/génétique
5.
Front Microbiol ; 10: 1313, 2019.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31281294

RÉSUMÉ

The bio-economy relies on microbial strains optimized for efficient large scale production of chemicals and fuels from inexpensive and renewable feedstocks under industrial conditions. The reduced one carbon compound methanol, whose production does not involve carbohydrates needed for the feed and food sector, can be used as sole carbon and energy source by methylotrophic bacteria like Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. This strain has already been engineered to produce various commodity and high value chemicals from methanol. The toxic effect of methanol limits its concentration as feedstock to 1% v/v. We obtained M. extorquens chassis strains tolerant to high methanol via adaptive directed evolution using the GM3 technology of automated continuous culture. Turbidostat and conditional medium swap regimes were employed for the parallel evolution of the recently characterized strain TK 0001 and the reference strain AM1 and enabled the isolation of derivatives of both strains capable of stable growth with 10% methanol. The isolates produced more biomass at 1% methanol than the ancestor strains. Genome sequencing identified the gene metY coding for an O-acetyl-L-homoserine sulfhydrylase as common target of mutation. We showed that the wildtype enzyme uses methanol as substrate at elevated concentrations. This side reaction produces methoxine, a toxic homolog of methionine incorporated in polypeptides during translation. All mutated metY alleles isolated from the evolved populations coded for inactive enzymes, designating O-acetyl-L-homoserine sulfhydrylase as a major vector of methanol toxicity. A whole cell transcriptomic analysis revealed that genes coding for chaperones and proteases were upregulated in the evolved cells as compared with the wildtype, suggesting that the cells had to cope with aberrant proteins formed during the adaptation to increasing methanol exposure. In addition, the expression of ribosomal proteins and enzymes related to energy production from methanol like formate dehydrogenases and ATP synthases was boosted in the evolved cells upon a short-term methanol stress. D-lactate production from methanol by adapted cells overexpressing the native D-lactate dehydrogenase was quantified. A significant higher lactate yield was obtained compared with control cells, indicating an enhanced capacity of the cells resistant to high methanol to assimilate this one carbon feedstock more efficiently.

6.
ACS Synth Biol ; 7(12): 2742-2749, 2018 12 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30475588

RÉSUMÉ

Insufficient rate of NADPH regeneration often limits the activity of biosynthetic pathways. Expression of NADPH-regenerating enzymes is commonly used to address this problem and increase cofactor availability. Here, we construct an Escherichia coli NADPH-auxotroph strain, which is deleted in all reactions that produce NADPH with the exception of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. This strain grows on a minimal medium only if gluconate is added as NADPH source. When gluconate is omitted, the strain serves as a "biosensor" for the capability of enzymes to regenerate NADPH in vivo. We show that the NADPH-auxotroph strain can be used to quantitatively assess different NADPH-regenerating enzymes and provide essential information on expression levels and concentrations of reduced substrates required to support optimal NADPH production rate. The NADPH-auxotroph strain thus serves as an effective metabolic platform for evaluating NADPH regeneration within the cellular context.


Sujet(s)
Escherichia coli/métabolisme , NADP/métabolisme , Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase/génétique , Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase/métabolisme , Escherichia coli/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Escherichia coli/croissance et développement , Formate dehydrogenases/génétique , Formate dehydrogenases/métabolisme , Génie génétique , Gluconates/métabolisme , Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NADP+)/génétique , Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NADP+)/métabolisme , NAD/métabolisme , Phénotype , Propanols/métabolisme , Propanols/pharmacologie
7.
ACS Synth Biol ; 7(9): 2029-2036, 2018 09 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30106273

RÉSUMÉ

Endowing biotechnological platform organisms with new carbon assimilation pathways is a key challenge for industrial biotechnology. Here we report progress toward the construction of formatotrophic Escherichia coli strains. Glycine and serine, universal precursors of one-carbon compounds oxidized during heterotrophic growth, are produced from formate and CO2 through a reductive route. An adaptive evolution strategy was applied to optimize the enzymatic steps of this route in appropriate selection strains. Metabolic labeling experiments with 13C-formate confirm the redirected carbon-flow. These results demonstrate the high plasticity of the central carbon metabolism of E. coli and the applicative potential of directed evolution for implementing synthetic pathways in microorganisms.


Sujet(s)
Carbone/métabolisme , Évolution moléculaire dirigée/méthodes , Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Carbone/analyse , Dioxyde de carbone/métabolisme , Isotopes du carbone/composition chimique , Chromatographie en phase liquide à haute performance , Escherichia coli/génétique , Formiates/composition chimique , Formiates/métabolisme , Glutathion/analyse , Glutathion/composition chimique , Sérine/métabolisme , Spectrométrie de masse en tandem
8.
ACS Synth Biol ; 7(9): 2023-2028, 2018 09 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29763299

RÉSUMÉ

Assimilation of one-carbon compounds presents a key biochemical challenge that limits their use as sustainable feedstocks for microbial growth and production. The reductive glycine pathway is a synthetic metabolic route that could provide an optimal way for the aerobic assimilation of reduced C1 compounds. Here, we show that a rational integration of native and foreign enzymes enables the tetrahydrofolate and glycine cleavage/synthase systems to operate in the reductive direction, such that Escherichia coli satisfies all of its glycine and serine requirements from the assimilation of formate and CO2. Importantly, the biosynthesis of serine from formate and CO2 does not lower the growth rate, indicating high flux that is able to provide 10% of cellular carbon. Our findings assert that the reductive glycine pathway could support highly efficient aerobic assimilation of C1-feedstocks.


Sujet(s)
Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Glycine/métabolisme , Amino-acid oxidoreductases/métabolisme , Carbone/métabolisme , Dioxyde de carbone/métabolisme , Protéines de transport/métabolisme , Formiates/composition chimique , Formiates/métabolisme , Complexes multienzymatiques/métabolisme , Sérine/métabolisme , Tétrahydrofolates/composition chimique , Transferases/métabolisme
9.
Genome Announc ; 6(8)2018 Feb 22.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29472323

RÉSUMÉ

Methylobacterium extorquens TK 0001 (DSM 1337, ATCC 43645) is an aerobic pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophic alphaproteobacterium isolated from soil in Poland. Here, we report the whole-genome sequence and annotation of this organism, which consists of a single 5.71-Mb chromosome.

10.
ACS Synth Biol ; 6(8): 1520-1533, 2017 08 18.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28467058

RÉSUMÉ

One-carbon metabolism is an ubiquitous metabolic pathway that encompasses the reactions transferring formyl-, hydroxymethyl- and methyl-groups bound to tetrahydrofolate for the synthesis of purine nucleotides, thymidylate, methionine and dehydropantoate, the precursor of coenzyme A. An alternative cyclic pathway was designed that substitutes 4-hydroxy-2-oxobutanoic acid (HOB), a compound absent from known metabolism, for the amino acids serine and glycine as one-carbon donors. It involves two novel reactions, the transamination of l-homoserine and the transfer of a one-carbon unit from HOB to tetrahydrofolate releasing pyruvate as coproduct. Since canonical reactions regenerate l-homoserine from pyruvate by carboxylation and subsequent reduction, every one-carbon moiety made available for anabolic reactions originates from CO2. The HOB-dependent pathway was established in an Escherichia coli auxotroph selected for prototrophy using long-term cultivation protocols. Genetic, metabolic and biochemical evidence support the emergence of a functional HOB-dependent one-carbon pathway achieved with the recruitment of the two enzymes l-homoserine transaminase and HOB-hydroxymethyltransferase and of HOB as an essential metabolic intermediate. Escherichia coli biochemical reprogramming was achieved by minimally altering canonical metabolism and leveraging on natural selection mechanisms, thereby launching the resulting strain on an evolutionary trajectory diverging from all known extant species.


Sujet(s)
Acétoacétates/métabolisme , Carbone/métabolisme , Protéines Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Amélioration génétique/méthodes , Génie métabolique/méthodes , Voies et réseaux métaboliques/génétique , Escherichia coli/génétique , Protéines Escherichia coli/génétique , Glycine/génétique , Glycine/métabolisme , Acide pyruvique/métabolisme , Sérine/génétique , Sérine/métabolisme , Biologie synthétique/méthodes
11.
J Bacteriol ; 193(18): 5055-6, 2011 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21868806

RÉSUMÉ

Streptomyces cattleya, a producer of the antibiotics thienamycin and cephamycin C, is one of the rare bacteria known to synthesize fluorinated metabolites. The genome consists of two linear replicons. The genes involved in fluorine metabolism and in the biosynthesis of the antibiotic thienamycin were mapped on both replicons.


Sujet(s)
ADN bactérien/composition chimique , ADN bactérien/génétique , Génome bactérien , Analyse de séquence d'ADN , Streptomyces/génétique , Antibactériens/métabolisme , Céfamycines/métabolisme , Hydrocarbures fluorés/métabolisme , Données de séquences moléculaires , Réplicon , Streptomyces/isolement et purification , Streptomyces/métabolisme , Thiénamycine/métabolisme
13.
Bioorg Med Chem Lett ; 19(14): 3767-70, 2009 Jul 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19535247

RÉSUMÉ

Probes were developed for the in vivo detection of transketolase activity by the use of a complementation assay in Escherichia coli auxotrophs They combine the d-threo ketose moiety recognised by transketolase and the side chain of leucine or methionine. These compounds were donor substrates of yeast transketolase leading to the release of the corresponding alpha-hydroxyaldehydes which could be converted in E. coli by a cascade of reactions into leucine or methionine required for cellular growth.


Sujet(s)
Aldéhydes/composition chimique , Escherichia coli/enzymologie , Hexanones/composition chimique , Sulfures/composition chimique , Transketolase/métabolisme , Escherichia coli/croissance et développement , Leucine/biosynthèse , Méthionine/biosynthèse , Mutation , Transketolase/composition chimique
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