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1.
Metab Eng ; 80: 254-266, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37923005

RESUMO

Stable isotope tracers are a powerful tool for the quantitative analysis of microbial metabolism, enabling pathway elucidation, metabolic flux quantification, and assessment of reaction and pathway thermodynamics. 13C and 2H metabolic flux analysis commonly relies on isotopically labeled carbon substrates, such as glucose. However, the use of 2H-labeled nutrient substrates faces limitations due to their high cost and limited availability in comparison to 13C-tracers. Furthermore, isotope tracer studies in industrially relevant bacteria that metabolize complex substrates such as cellulose, hemicellulose, or lignocellulosic biomass, are challenging given the difficulty in obtaining these as isotopically labeled substrates. In this study, we examine the potential of deuterated water (2H2O) as an affordable, substrate-neutral isotope tracer for studying central carbon metabolism. We apply 2H2O labeling to investigate the reversibility of glycolytic reactions across three industrially relevant bacterial species -C. thermocellum, Z. mobilis, and E. coli-harboring distinct glycolytic pathways with unique thermodynamics. We demonstrate that 2H2O labeling recapitulates previous reversibility and thermodynamic findings obtained with established 13C and 2H labeled nutrient substrates. Furthermore, we exemplify the utility of this 2H2O labeling approach by applying it to high-substrate C. thermocellum fermentations -a setting in which the use of conventional tracers is impractical-thereby identifying the glycolytic enzyme phosphofructokinase as a major bottleneck during high-substrate fermentations and unveiling critical insights that will steer future engineering efforts to enhance ethanol production in this cellulolytic organism. This study demonstrates the utility of deuterated water as a substrate-agnostic isotope tracer for examining flux and reversibility of central carbon metabolic reactions, which yields biological insights comparable to those obtained using costly 2H-labeled nutrient substrates.


Assuntos
Carbono , Escherichia coli , Carbono/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Glicólise , Isótopos/metabolismo , Termodinâmica , Marcação por Isótopo
2.
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod ; 16(1): 137, 2023 Sep 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37710260

RESUMO

Clostridium thermocellum is a natively cellulolytic bacterium that is promising candidate for cellulosic biofuel production, and can produce ethanol at high yields (75-80% of theoretical) but the ethanol titers produced thus far are too low for commercial application. In several strains of C. thermocellum engineered for increased ethanol yield, ethanol titer seems to be limited by ethanol tolerance. Previous work to improve ethanol tolerance has focused on the WT organism. In this work, we focused on understanding ethanol tolerance in several engineered strains of C. thermocellum. We observed a tradeoff between ethanol tolerance and production. Adaptation for increased ethanol tolerance decreases ethanol production. Second, we observed a consistent genetic response to ethanol stress involving mutations at the AdhE locus. These mutations typically reduced NADH-linked ADH activity. About half of the ethanol tolerance phenotype could be attributed to the elimination of NADH-linked activity based on a targeted deletion of adhE. Finally, we observed that rich growth medium increases ethanol tolerance, but this effect is eliminated in an adhE deletion strain. Together, these suggest that ethanol inhibits growth and metabolism via a redox-imbalance mechanism. The improved understanding of mechanisms of ethanol tolerance described here lays a foundation for developing strains of C. thermocellum with improved ethanol production.

3.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 89(4): e0040623, 2023 04 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37039651

RESUMO

Clostridium thermocellum, a promising candidate for consolidated bioprocessing, has been subjected to numerous engineering strategies for enhanced bioethanol production. Measurements of intracellular metabolites at substrate concentrations high enough (>50 g/L) to allow the production of industrially relevant titers of ethanol would inform efforts toward this end but have been difficult due to the production of a viscous substance that interferes with the filtration and quenching steps during metabolite extraction. To determine whether this problem is unique to C. thermocellum, we performed filtration experiments with other organisms that have been engineered for high-titer ethanol production, including Escherichia coli and Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum. We addressed the problem through a series of improvements, including active pH control (to reduce problems with viscosity), investigation of different filter materials and pore sizes (to increase the filtration capacity), and correction for extracellular metabolite concentrations, and we developed a technique for more accurate intracellular metabolite measurements at elevated substrate concentrations. IMPORTANCE The accurate measurement of intracellular metabolites (metabolomics) is an integral part of metabolic engineering for the enhanced production of industrially important compounds and a useful technique to understand microbial physiology. Previous work tended to focus on model organisms under laboratory conditions. As we try to perform metabolomic studies with a wider range of organisms under conditions that more closely represent those found in nature or industry, we have found limitations in existing techniques. For example, fast filtration is an important step in quenching metabolism in preparation for metabolite extraction; however, it does not work for cultures of C. thermocellum at high substrate concentrations. In this work, we characterize the extent of the problem and develop techniques to overcome it.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Açúcares , Açúcares/metabolismo , Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Engenharia Metabólica , Etanol/metabolismo
4.
Metab Eng ; 77: 306-322, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37085141

RESUMO

Lignocellulosic biomass is an abundant and renewable source of carbon for chemical manufacturing, yet it is cumbersome in conventional processes. A promising, and increasingly studied, candidate for lignocellulose bioprocessing is the thermophilic anaerobe Clostridium thermocellum given its potential to produce ethanol, organic acids, and hydrogen gas from lignocellulosic biomass under high substrate loading. Possessing an atypical glycolytic pathway which substitutes GTP or pyrophosphate (PPi) for ATP in some steps, including in the energy-investment phase, identification, and manipulation of PPi sources are key to engineering its metabolism. Previous efforts to identify the primary pyrophosphate have been unsuccessful. Here, we explore pyrophosphate metabolism through reconstructing, updating, and analyzing a new genome-scale stoichiometric model for C. thermocellum, iCTH669. Hundreds of changes to the former GEM, iCBI655, including correcting cofactor usages, addressing charge and elemental balance, standardizing biomass composition, and incorporating the latest experimental evidence led to a MEMOTE score improvement to 94%. We found agreement of iCTH669 model predictions across all available fermentation and biomass yield datasets. The feasibility of hundreds of PPi synthesis routes, newly identified and previously proposed, were assessed through the lens of the iCTH669 model including biomass synthesis, tRNA synthesis, newly identified sources, and previously proposed PPi-generating cycles. In all cases, the metabolic cost of PPi synthesis is at best equivalent to investment of one ATP suggesting no direct energetic advantage for the cofactor substitution in C. thermocellum. Even though no unique source of PPi could be gleaned by the model, by combining with gene expression data two most likely scenarios emerge. First, previously investigated PPi sources likely account for most PPi production in wild-type strains. Second, alternate metabolic routes as encoded by iCTH669 can collectively maintain PPi levels even when previously investigated synthesis cycles are disrupted. Model iCTH669 is available at github.com/maranasgroup/iCTH669.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Clostridium thermocellum/genética , Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Difosfatos/metabolismo , Glicólise/genética , Fermentação , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo
5.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 2394, 2023 02 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36765076

RESUMO

Cocultures of engineered thermophilic bacteria can ferment lignocellulose without costly pretreatment or added enzymes, an ability that can be exploited for low cost biofuel production from renewable feedstocks. The hemicellulose-fermenting species Thermoanaerobacterium thermosaccharolyticum was engineered for high ethanol yield, but we found that the strains switched from growth-coupled production of ethanol to growth uncoupled production of acetate and 1,2-propanediol upon growth cessation, producing up to 6.7 g/L 1,2-propanediol from 60 g/L cellobiose. The unique capability of this species to make 1,2-propanediol from sugars was described decades ago, but the genes responsible were not identified. Here we deleted genes encoding methylglyoxal reductase, methylglyoxal synthase and glycerol dehydrogenase. Deletion of the latter two genes eliminated propanediol production. To understand how carbon flux is redirected in this species, we hypothesized that high ATP levels during growth cessation downregulate the activity of alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase activities. Measurements with cell free extracts show approximately twofold and tenfold inhibition of these activities by 10 mM ATP, supporting the hypothesized mechanism of metabolic redirection. This result may have implications for efforts to direct and maximize flux through alcohol dehydrogenase in other species.


Assuntos
Etanol , Propilenoglicol , Propilenoglicol/metabolismo , Etanol/metabolismo , Propilenoglicóis , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Fermentação
6.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 88(22): e0125822, 2022 11 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36286488

RESUMO

Glycolysis is an ancient, widespread, and highly conserved metabolic pathway that converts glucose into pyruvate. In the canonical pathway, the phosphofructokinase (PFK) reaction plays an important role in controlling flux through the pathway. Clostridium thermocellum has an atypical glycolysis and uses pyrophosphate (PPi) instead of ATP as the phosphate donor for the PFK reaction. The reduced thermodynamic driving force of the PPi-PFK reaction shifts the entire pathway closer to thermodynamic equilibrium, which has been predicted to limit product titers. Here, we replace the PPi-PFK reaction with an ATP-PFK reaction. We demonstrate that the local changes are consistent with thermodynamic predictions: the ratio of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate to fructose-6-phosphate increases, and the reverse flux through the reaction (determined by 13C labeling) decreases. The final titer and distribution of fermentation products, however, do not change, demonstrating that the thermodynamic constraints of the PPi-PFK reaction are not the sole factor limiting product titer. IMPORTANCE The ability to control the distribution of thermodynamic driving force throughout a metabolic pathway is likely to be an important tool for metabolic engineering. The phosphofructokinase reaction is a key enzyme in Embden-Mayerhof-Parnas glycolysis and therefore improving the thermodynamic driving force of this reaction in C. thermocellum is believed to enable higher product titers. Here, we demonstrate switching from pyrophosphate to ATP does in fact increases the thermodynamic driving force of the phosphofructokinase reaction in vivo. This study also identifies and overcomes a physiological hurdle toward expressing an ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase in an organism that utilizes an atypical glycolytic pathway. As such, the method described here to enable expression of ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase in an organism with an atypical glycolytic pathway will be informative toward engineering the glycolytic pathways of other industrial organism candidates with atypical glycolytic pathways.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Difosfatos/metabolismo , Fosfofrutoquinases/genética , Fosfofrutoquinase-1/genética , Fosfofrutoquinase-1/metabolismo , Glicólise , Termodinâmica , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo
7.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 3870, 2022 07 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35790765

RESUMO

Economically viable production of cellulosic biofuels requires operation at high solids loadings-on the order of 15 wt%. To this end we characterize Nature's ability to deconstruct and utilize mid-season switchgrass at increasing solid loadings using an anaerobic methanogenic microbiome. This community exhibits undiminished fractional carbohydrate solubilization at loadings ranging from 30 g/L to 150 g/L. Metaproteomic interrogation reveals marked increases in the abundance of specific carbohydrate-active enzyme classes. Significant enrichment of auxiliary activity family 6 enzymes at higher solids suggests a role for Fenton chemistry. Stress-response proteins accompanying these reactions are similarly upregulated at higher solids, as are ß-glucosidases, xylosidases, carbohydrate-debranching, and pectin-acting enzymes-all of which indicate that removal of deconstruction inhibitors is important for observed undiminished solubilization. Our work provides insights into the mechanisms by which natural microbiomes effectively deconstruct and utilize lignocellulose at high solids loadings, informing the future development of defined cultures for efficient bioconversion.


Assuntos
Lignina , Microbiota , Anaerobiose , Carboidratos , Lignina/metabolismo
8.
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod ; 15(1): 12, 2022 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35418299

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: For economically viable 2nd generation biofuels, processing of high solid lignocellulosic substrate concentrations is a necessity. The cellulolytic thermophilic anaerobe Clostridium thermocellum is one of the most effective biocatalysts for solubilization of carbohydrate harbored in lignocellulose. This study aims to document the solubilization performance of Clostridium thermocellum at increasing solids concentrations for two lignocellulosic feedstocks, corn stover and switchgrass, and explore potential effectors of solubilization performance. RESULTS: Monocultures of Clostridium thermocellum demonstrated high levels of carbohydrate solubilization for both unpretreated corn stover and switchgrass. However, fractional carbohydrate solubilization decreases with increasing solid loadings. Fermentation of model insoluble substrate (cellulose) in the presence of high solids lignocellulosic spent broth is temporarily affected but not model soluble substrate (cellobiose) fermentations. Mid-fermentation addition of cells (C. thermocellum) or model substrates did not significantly enhance overall corn stover solubilization loaded at 80 g/L, however cultures utilized the model substrates in the presence of high concentrations of corn stover. An increase in corn stover solubilization was observed when water was added, effectively diluting the solids concentration mid-fermentation. Introduction of a hemicellulose-utilizing coculture partner, Thermoanaerobacterium thermosaccharolyticum, increased the fractional carbohydrate solubilization at both high and low solid loadings. Residual solubilized carbohydrates diminished significantly in the presence of T. thermosaccharolyticum compared to monocultures of C. thermocellum, yet a small fraction of solubilized oligosaccharides of both C5 and C6 sugars remained unutilized. CONCLUSION: Diminishing fractional carbohydrate solubilization with increasing substrate loading was observed for C. thermocellum-mediated solubilization and fermentation of unpretreated lignocellulose feedstocks. Results of experiments involving spent broth addition do not support a major role for inhibitors present in the liquid phase. Mid-fermentation addition experiments confirm that C. thermocellum and its enzymes remain capable of converting model substrates during the middle of high solids lignocellulose fermentation. An increase in fractional carbohydrate solubilization was made possible by (1) mid-fermentation solid loading dilutions and (2) coculturing C. thermocellum with T. thermosaccharolyticum, which ferments solubilized hemicellulose. Incomplete utilization of solubilized carbohydrates suggests that a small fraction of the carbohydrates is unaffected by the extracellular carbohydrate-active enzymes present in the culture.

9.
Metab Eng ; 69: 286-301, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34982997

RESUMO

Clostridium thermocellum is a promising candidate for consolidated bioprocessing because it can directly ferment cellulose to ethanol. Despite significant efforts, achieved yields and titers fall below industrially relevant targets. This implies that there still exist unknown enzymatic, regulatory, and/or possibly thermodynamic bottlenecks that can throttle back metabolic flow. By (i) elucidating internal metabolic fluxes in wild-type C. thermocellum grown on cellobiose via 13C-metabolic flux analysis (13C-MFA), (ii) parameterizing a core kinetic model, and (iii) subsequently deploying an ensemble-docking workflow for discovering substrate-level regulations, this paper aims to reveal some of these factors and expand our knowledgebase governing C. thermocellum metabolism. Generated 13C labeling data were used with 13C-MFA to generate a wild-type flux distribution for the metabolic network. Notably, flux elucidation through MFA alluded to serine generation via the mercaptopyruvate pathway. Using the elucidated flux distributions in conjunction with batch fermentation process yield data for various mutant strains, we constructed a kinetic model of C. thermocellum core metabolism (i.e. k-ctherm138). Subsequently, we used the parameterized kinetic model to explore the effect of removing substrate-level regulations on ethanol yield and titer. Upon exploring all possible simultaneous (up to four) regulation removals we identified combinations that lead to many-fold model predicted improvement in ethanol titer. In addition, by coupling a systematic method for identifying putative competitive inhibitory mechanisms using K-FIT kinetic parameterization with the ensemble-docking workflow, we flagged 67 putative substrate-level inhibition mechanisms across central carbon metabolism supported by both kinetic formalism and docking analysis.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Celobiose/metabolismo , Clostridium thermocellum/genética , Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Etanol/metabolismo , Fermentação , Cinética
10.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 88(1): e0153121, 2022 01 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35015978

RESUMO

Clostridium thermocellum is a thermophilic, anaerobic bacterium that natively ferments cellulose to ethanol and is a candidate for cellulosic biofuel production. Recently, we identified a hypermutator strain of C. thermocellum with a C669Y mutation in the polC gene, which encodes a DNA polymerase III enzyme. Here, we reintroduced this mutation using recently developed CRISPR tools to demonstrate that this mutation is sufficient to recreate the hypermutator phenotype. The resulting strain shows an approximately 30-fold increase in the mutation rate. This mutation is hypothesized to function by interfering with metal ion coordination in the PHP (polymerase and histidinol phosphatase) domain, which is responsible for proofreading. The ability to selectively increase the mutation rate in C. thermocellum is a useful tool for future directed evolution experiments. IMPORTANCE Cellulosic biofuels are a promising approach to decarbonize the heavy-duty-transportation sector. A longstanding barrier to cost-effective cellulosic biofuel production is the recalcitrance of cellulose to solubilization. Native cellulose-consuming organisms, such as Clostridium thermocellum, are promising candidates for cellulosic biofuel production; however, they often need to be genetically modified to improve product formation. One approach is adaptive laboratory evolution. Our findings demonstrate a way to increase the mutation rate in this industrially relevant organism, which can reduce the time needed for adaptive evolution experiments.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Composição de Bases , Clostridium thermocellum/genética , DNA Polimerase III , Nucleotídeos , Fenótipo , Filogenia , RNA Ribossômico 16S , Análise de Sequência de DNA
11.
N Biotechnol ; 67: 12-22, 2022 Mar 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34915174

RESUMO

Lactic acid (LA) has several applications in the food, cosmetics and pharmaceutical industries, as well as in the production of biodegradable plastic polymers, namely polylactides. Industrial production of LA is essentially based on microbial fermentation. Recent reports have shown the potential of the cellulolytic bacterium Clostridium thermocellum for direct LA production from inexpensive lignocellulosic biomass. However, C. thermocellum is highly sensitive to acids and does not grow at pH < 6.0. Improvement of LA tolerance of this microorganism is pivotal for its application in cost-efficient production of LA. In the present study, the LA tolerance of C. thermocellum strains LL345 (wild-type fermentation profile) and LL1111 (high LA yield) was increased by adaptive laboratory evolution. At large inoculum size (10 %), the maximum tolerated LA concentration of strain LL1111 was more than doubled, from 15 g/L to 35 g/L, while subcultures evolved from LL345 showed 50-85 % faster growth in medium containing 45 g/L LA. Gene mutations (pyruvate phosphate dikinase, histidine protein kinase/phosphorylase) possibly affecting carbohydrate and/or phosphate metabolism have been detected in most LA-adapted populations. Although improvement of LA tolerance may sometimes also enable higher LA production in microorganisms, C. thermocellum LA-adapted cultures showed a yield of LA, and generally of other organic acids, similar to or lower than parental strains. Based on its improved LA tolerance and LA titer similar to its parent strain (LL1111), mixed adapted culture LL1630 showed the highest performing phenotype and could serve as a framework for improving LA production by further metabolic engineering.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Clostridium thermocellum/genética , Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Etanol/metabolismo , Fermentação , Ácido Láctico , Engenharia Metabólica
12.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 88(4): e0185721, 2022 02 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34936842

RESUMO

The atypical glycolysis of Clostridium thermocellum is characterized by the use of pyrophosphate (PPi) as a phosphoryl donor for phosphofructokinase (Pfk) and pyruvate phosphate dikinase (Ppdk) reactions. Previously, biosynthetic PPi was calculated to be stoichiometrically insufficient to drive glycolysis. This study investigates the role of a H+-pumping membrane-bound pyrophosphatase, glycogen cycling, a predicted Ppdk-malate shunt cycle, and acetate cycling in generating PPi. Knockout studies and enzyme assays confirmed that clo1313_0823 encodes a membrane-bound pyrophosphatase. Additionally, clo1313_0717-0718 was confirmed to encode ADP-glucose synthase by knockouts, glycogen measurements in C. thermocellum, and heterologous expression in Escherichia coli. Unexpectedly, individually targeted gene deletions of the four putative PPi sources did not have a significant phenotypic effect. Although combinatorial deletion of all four putative PPi sources reduced the growth rate by 22% (0.30 ± 0.01 h-1) and the biomass yield by 38% (0.18 ± 0.00 gbiomass gsubstrate-1), this change was much smaller than what would be expected for stoichiometrically essential PPi-supplying mechanisms. Growth-arrested cells of the quadruple knockout readily fermented cellobiose, indicating that the unknown PPi-supplying mechanisms are independent of biosynthesis. An alternative hypothesis that ATP-dependent Pfk activity circumvents a need for PPi altogether was falsified by enzyme assays, heterologous expression of candidate genes, and whole-genome sequencing. As a secondary outcome, enzymatic assays confirmed functional annotation of clo1313_1832 as ATP- and GTP-dependent fructokinase. These results indicate that the four investigated PPi sources individually and combined play no significant PPi-supplying role, and the true source(s) of PPi, or alternative phosphorylating mechanisms, that drive(s) glycolysis in C. thermocellum remain(s) elusive. IMPORTANCE Increased understanding of the central metabolism of C. thermocellum is important from a fundamental as well as from a sustainability and industrial perspective. In addition to showing that H+-pumping membrane-bound PPase, glycogen cycling, a Ppdk-malate shunt cycle, and acetate cycling are not significant sources of PPi supply, this study adds functional annotation of four genes and availability of an updated PPi stoichiometry from biosynthesis to the scientific domain. Together, this aids future metabolic engineering attempts aimed to improve C. thermocellum as a cell factory for sustainable and efficient production of ethanol from lignocellulosic material through consolidated bioprocessing with minimal pretreatment. Getting closer to elucidating the elusive source of PPi, or alternative phosphorylating mechanisms, for the atypical glycolysis is itself of fundamental importance. Additionally, the findings of this study directly contribute to investigations into trade-offs between thermodynamic driving force versus energy yield of PPi- and ATP-dependent glycolysis.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum , Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Difosfatos/metabolismo , Glucose-1-Fosfato Adenililtransferase/metabolismo , Pirofosfatase Inorgânica/metabolismo , Fosfatos/metabolismo , Piruvato Ortofosfato Diquinase/genética , Piruvato Ortofosfato Diquinase/metabolismo , Ácido Pirúvico/metabolismo
13.
Front Microbiol ; 12: 628308, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33679651

RESUMO

The pyruvate kinase (PYK) isozyme from Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum (TsPYK) has previously been used in metabolic engineering for improved ethanol production. This isozyme belongs to a subclass of PYK isozymes that include an extra C-domain. Like other isozymes that include this extra C-domain, we found that TsPYK is activated by AMP and ribose-5-phosphate (R5P). Our use of sugar-phosphate analogs generated a surprising result in that IMP and GMP are allosteric inhibitors (rather than activators) of TsPYK. We believe this to be the first report of any PYK isozyme being inhibited by IMP and GMP. A truncated protein that lacks the extra C-domain is also inhibited by IMP. A screen of several other bacterial PYK enzymes (include several that have the extra-C domain) indicates that the inhibition by IMP is specific to only a subset of those isozymes.

14.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 87(9)2021 04 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33608285

RESUMO

The native ability of Clostridium thermocellum to efficiently solubilize cellulose makes it an interesting platform for sustainable biofuel production through consolidated bioprocessing. Together with other improvements, industrial implementation of C. thermocellum, as well as fundamental studies into its metabolism, would benefit from improved and reproducible consumption of hexose sugars. To investigate growth of C. thermocellum on glucose or fructose, as well as the underlying molecular mechanisms, laboratory evolution was performed in carbon-limited chemostats with increasing concentrations of glucose or fructose and decreasing cellobiose concentrations. Growth on both glucose and fructose was achieved with biomass yields of 0.09 ± 0.00 and 0.18 ± 0.00 gbiomass gsubstrate-1, respectively, compared to 0.15 ± 0.01 gbiomass gsubstrate-1 for wild type on cellobiose. Single-colony isolates had no or short lag times on the monosaccharides, while wild type showed 42 ± 4 h on glucose and >80 h on fructose. With good growth on glucose, fructose, and cellobiose, the fructose isolates were chosen for genome sequence-based reverse metabolic engineering. Deletion of a putative transcriptional regulator (Clo1313_1831), which upregulated fructokinase activity, reduced lag time on fructose to 12 h with a growth rate of 0.11 ± 0.01 h-1 and resulted in immediate growth on glucose at 0.24 ± 0.01 h-1 Additional introduction of a G-to-V mutation at position 148 in cbpA resulted in immediate growth on fructose at 0.32 ± 0.03 h-1 These insights can guide engineering of strains for fundamental studies into transport and the upper glycolysis, as well as maximizing product yields in industrial settings.IMPORTANCEC. thermocellum is an important candidate for sustainable and cost-effective production of bioethanol through consolidated bioprocessing. In addition to unsurpassed cellulose deconstruction, industrial application and fundamental studies would benefit from improvement of glucose and fructose consumption. This study demonstrated that C. thermocellum can be evolved for reproducible constitutive growth on glucose or fructose. Subsequent genome sequencing, gene editing, and physiological characterization identified two underlying mutations with a role in (regulation of) transport or metabolism of the hexose sugars. In light of these findings, such mutations have likely (and unknowingly) also occurred in previous studies with C. thermocellum using hexose-based media with possible broad regulatory consequences. By targeted modification of these genes, industrial and research strains of C. thermocellum can be engineered to (i) reduce glucose accumulation, (ii) study cellodextrin transport systems in vivo, (iii) allow experiments at >120 g liter-1 soluble substrate concentration, or (iv) reduce costs for labeling studies.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Frutose/metabolismo , Glucose/metabolismo , Clostridium thermocellum/genética , Clostridium thermocellum/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Genoma Bacteriano , Laboratórios , Engenharia Metabólica , Mutação , Sequenciamento Completo do Genoma
15.
Biotechnol Biofuels ; 14(1): 24, 2021 Jan 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33461608

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The cellulolytic thermophile Clostridium thermocellum is an important biocatalyst due to its ability to solubilize lignocellulosic feedstocks without the need for pretreatment or exogenous enzyme addition. At low concentrations of substrate, C. thermocellum can solubilize corn fiber > 95% in 5 days, but solubilization declines markedly at substrate concentrations higher than 20 g/L. This differs for model cellulose like Avicel, on which the maximum solubilization rate increases in proportion to substrate concentration. The goal of this study was to examine fermentation at increasing corn fiber concentrations and investigate possible reasons for declining performance. RESULTS: The rate of growth of C. thermocellum on corn fiber, inferred from CipA scaffoldin levels measured by LC-MS/MS, showed very little increase with increasing solids loading. To test for inhibition, we evaluated the effects of spent broth on growth and cellulase activity. The liquids remaining after corn fiber fermentation were found to be strongly inhibitory to growth on cellobiose, a substrate that does not require cellulose hydrolysis. Additionally, the hydrolytic activity of C. thermocellum cellulase was also reduced to less-than half by adding spent broth. Noting that > 15 g/L hemicellulose oligosaccharides accumulated in the spent broth of a 40 g/L corn fiber fermentation, we tested the effect of various model carbohydrates on growth on cellobiose and Avicel. Some compounds like xylooligosaccharides caused a decline in cellulolytic activity and a reduction in the maximum solubilization rate on Avicel. However, there were no relevant model compounds that could replicate the strong inhibition by spent broth on C. thermocellum growth on cellobiose. Cocultures of C. thermocellum with hemicellulose-consuming partners-Herbinix spp. strain LL1355 and Thermoanaerobacterium thermosaccharolyticum-exhibited lower levels of unfermented hemicellulose hydrolysis products, a doubling of the maximum solubilization rate, and final solubilization increased from 67 to 93%. CONCLUSIONS: This study documents inhibition of C. thermocellum with increasing corn fiber concentration and demonstrates inhibition of cellulase activity by xylooligosaccharides, but further work is needed to understand why growth on cellobiose was inhibited by corn fiber fermentation broth. Our results support the importance of hemicellulose-utilizing coculture partners to augment C. thermocellum in the fermentation of lignocellulosic feedstocks at high solids loading.

16.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 86(23)2020 11 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32978139

RESUMO

Clostridium thermocellum and Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum were grown in cellobiose-limited chemostat cultures at a fixed dilution rate. C. thermocellum produced acetate, ethanol, formate, and lactate. Surprisingly, and in contrast to batch cultures, in cellobiose-limited chemostat cultures of T. saccharolyticum, ethanol was the main fermentation product. Enzyme assays confirmed that in C. thermocellum, glycolysis proceeds via pyrophosphate (PPi)-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFK), pyruvate-phosphate dikinase (PPDK), as well as a malate shunt for the conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to pyruvate. Pyruvate kinase activity was not detectable. In T. saccharolyticum, ATP but not PPi served as cofactor for the PFK reaction. High activities of both pyruvate kinase and PPDK were present, whereas the activities of a malate shunt enzymes were low in T. saccharolyticum In C. thermocellum, glycolysis via PPi-PFK and PPDK obeys the equation glucose + 5 NDP + 3 PPi → 2 pyruvate + 5 NTP + Pi (where NDP is nucleoside diphosphate and NTP is nucleoside triphosphate). Metabolic flux analysis of chemostat data with the wild type and a deletion mutant of the proton-pumping pyrophosphatase showed that a PPi-generating mechanism must be present that operates according to ATP + Pi → ADP + PPi Both organisms also produced significant amounts of amino acids in cellobiose-limited cultures. It was anticipated that this phenomenon would be suppressed by growth under nitrogen limitation. Surprisingly, nitrogen-limited chemostat cultivation of wild-type C. thermocellum revealed a bottleneck in pyruvate oxidation, as large amounts of pyruvate and amino acids, mainly valine, were excreted; up to 50% of the nitrogen consumed was excreted again as amino acids.IMPORTANCE This study discusses the fate of pyrophosphate in the metabolism of two thermophilic anaerobes that lack a soluble irreversible pyrophosphatase as present in Escherichia coli but instead use a reversible membrane-bound proton-pumping enzyme. In such organisms, the charging of tRNA with amino acids may become more reversible. This may contribute to the observed excretion of amino acids during sugar fermentation by Clostridium thermocellum and Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum Calculation of the energetic advantage of reversible pyrophosphate-dependent glycolysis, as occurs in Clostridium thermocellum, could not be properly evaluated, as currently available genome-scale models neglect the anabolic generation of pyrophosphate in, for example, polymerization of amino acids to protein. This anabolic pyrophosphate replaces ATP and thus saves energy. Its amount is, however, too small to cover the pyrophosphate requirement of sugar catabolism in glycolysis. Consequently, pyrophosphate for catabolism is generated according to ATP + Pi → ADP + PPi.


Assuntos
Clostridium thermocellum/metabolismo , Difosfatos/metabolismo , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Thermoanaerobacterium/metabolismo , Reatores Biológicos , Análise do Fluxo Metabólico
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(36): 21968-21977, 2020 09 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32839342

RESUMO

Biofuel and bioenergy systems are integral to most climate stabilization scenarios for displacement of transport sector fossil fuel use and for producing negative emissions via carbon capture and storage (CCS). However, the net greenhouse gas mitigation benefit of such pathways is controversial due to concerns around ecosystem carbon losses from land use change and foregone sequestration benefits from alternative land uses. Here, we couple bottom-up ecosystem simulation with models of cellulosic biofuel production and CCS in order to track ecosystem and supply chain carbon flows for current and future biofuel systems, with comparison to competing land-based biological mitigation schemes. Analyzing three contrasting US case study sites, we show that on land transitioning out of crops or pasture, switchgrass cultivation for cellulosic ethanol production has per-hectare mitigation potential comparable to reforestation and severalfold greater than grassland restoration. In contrast, harvesting and converting existing secondary forest at those sites incurs large initial carbon debt requiring long payback periods. We also highlight how plausible future improvements in energy crop yields and biorefining technology together with CCS would achieve mitigation potential 4 and 15 times greater than forest and grassland restoration, respectively. Finally, we show that recent estimates of induced land use change are small relative to the opportunities for improving system performance that we quantify here. While climate and other ecosystem service benefits cannot be taken for granted from cellulosic biofuel deployment, our scenarios illustrate how conventional and carbon-negative biofuel systems could make a near-term, robust, and distinctive contribution to the climate challenge.


Assuntos
Biocombustíveis/análise , Carbono/análise , Gases de Efeito Estufa/análise , Biocombustíveis/efeitos adversos , Biotecnologia , Carbono/metabolismo , Celulose/química , Celulose/metabolismo , Produtos Agrícolas/química , Produtos Agrícolas/metabolismo , Ecossistema , Etanol/metabolismo , Gases de Efeito Estufa/efeitos adversos
18.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2096: 21-43, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32720144

RESUMO

In this work, we describe genetic tools and techniques for engineering Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum. In particular, the T. saccharolyticum transformation protocol and the methods for selecting for transformants are described. Methods for determining strain phenotypes are also presented.


Assuntos
Engenharia Metabólica/métodos , Thermoanaerobacterium/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Ensaios Enzimáticos , Fermentação , Deleção de Genes , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Engenharia Genética , Fenótipo , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas/genética , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Thermoanaerobacterium/genética , Transformação Genética
19.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 1937, 2020 04 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32321909

RESUMO

The fiber in corn kernels, currently unutilized in the corn to ethanol process, represents an opportunity for introduction of cellulose conversion technology. We report here that Clostridium thermocellum can solubilize over 90% of the carbohydrate in autoclaved corn fiber, including its hemicellulose component glucuronoarabinoxylan (GAX). However, Thermoanaerobacterium thermosaccharolyticum or several other described hemicellulose-fermenting thermophilic bacteria can only partially utilize this GAX. We describe the isolation of a previously undescribed organism, Herbinix spp. strain LL1355, from a thermophilic microbiome that can consume 85% of the recalcitrant GAX. We sequence its genome, and based on structural analysis of the GAX, identify six enzymes that hydrolyze GAX linkages. Combinations of up to four enzymes are successfully expressed in T. thermosaccharolyticum. Supplementation with these enzymes allows T. thermosaccharolyticum to consume 78% of the GAX compared to 53% by the parent strain and increases ethanol yield from corn fiber by 24%.


Assuntos
Clostridiales/metabolismo , Técnicas de Cocultura/métodos , Etanol/metabolismo , Microbiologia Industrial/métodos , Thermoanaerobacterium/metabolismo , Zea mays/microbiologia , Celulose/metabolismo , Clostridiales/genética , Fermentação , Temperatura Alta , Thermoanaerobacterium/genética , Xilanos/metabolismo , Zea mays/metabolismo
20.
mSystems ; 5(2)2020 Mar 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32184362

RESUMO

Clostridium thermocellum and Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum are thermophilic anaerobic bacteria with complementary metabolic capabilities that utilize distinct glycolytic pathways for the conversion of cellulosic sugars to biofuels. We integrated quantitative metabolomics with 2H and 13C metabolic flux analysis to investigate the in vivo reversibility and thermodynamics of the central metabolic networks of these two microbes. We found that the glycolytic pathway in C. thermocellum operates remarkably close to thermodynamic equilibrium, with an overall drop in Gibbs free energy 5-fold lower than that of T. saccharolyticum or anaerobically grown Escherichia coli The limited thermodynamic driving force of glycolysis in C. thermocellum could be attributed in large part to the small free energy of the phosphofructokinase reaction producing fructose bisphosphate. The ethanol fermentation pathway was also substantially more reversible in C. thermocellum than in T. saccharolyticum These observations help explain the comparatively low ethanol titers of C. thermocellum and suggest engineering interventions that can be used to increase its ethanol productivity and glycolytic rate. In addition to thermodynamic analysis, we used our isotope tracer data to reconstruct the T. saccharolyticum central metabolic network, revealing exclusive use of the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas (EMP) pathway for glycolysis, a bifurcated tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, and a sedoheptulose bisphosphate bypass active within the pentose phosphate pathway.IMPORTANCE Thermodynamics constitutes a key determinant of flux and enzyme efficiency in metabolic networks. Here, we provide new insights into the divergent thermodynamics of the glycolytic pathways of C. thermocellum and T. saccharolyticum, two industrially relevant thermophilic bacteria whose metabolism still is not well understood. We report that while the glycolytic pathway in T. saccharolyticum is as thermodynamically favorable as that found in model organisms, such as E. coli or Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the glycolytic pathway of C. thermocellum operates near equilibrium. The use of a near-equilibrium glycolytic pathway, with potentially increased ATP yield, by this cellulolytic microbe may represent an evolutionary adaptation to growth on cellulose, but it has the drawback of being highly susceptible to product feedback inhibition. The results of this study will facilitate future engineering of high-performance strains capable of transforming cellulosic biomass to biofuels at high yields and titers.

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