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1.
Nature ; 537(7622): 694-697, 2016 Sep 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27654918

RESUMO

A bio-based economy has the potential to provide sustainable substitutes for petroleum-based products and new chemical building blocks for advanced materials. We previously engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae for industrial production of the isoprenoid artemisinic acid for use in antimalarial treatments. Adapting these strains for biosynthesis of other isoprenoids such as ß-farnesene (C15H24), a plant sesquiterpene with versatile industrial applications, is straightforward. However, S. cerevisiae uses a chemically inefficient pathway for isoprenoid biosynthesis, resulting in yield and productivity limitations incompatible with commodity-scale production. Here we use four non-native metabolic reactions to rewire central carbon metabolism in S. cerevisiae, enabling biosynthesis of cytosolic acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA, the two-carbon isoprenoid precursor) with a reduced ATP requirement, reduced loss of carbon to CO2-emitting reactions, and improved pathway redox balance. We show that strains with rewired central metabolism can devote an identical quantity of sugar to farnesene production as control strains, yet produce 25% more farnesene with that sugar while requiring 75% less oxygen. These changes lower feedstock costs and dramatically increase productivity in industrial fermentations which are by necessity oxygen-constrained. Despite altering key regulatory nodes, engineered strains grow robustly under taxing industrial conditions, maintaining stable yield for two weeks in broth that reaches >15% farnesene by volume. This illustrates that rewiring yeast central metabolism is a viable strategy for cost-effective, large-scale production of acetyl-CoA-derived molecules.


Assuntos
Reatores Biológicos , Carbono/metabolismo , Engenharia Metabólica , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Terpenos/metabolismo , Acetilcoenzima A/biossíntese , Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Vias Biossintéticas , Metabolismo dos Carboidratos , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Citosol/metabolismo , Fermentação , Oxirredução , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzimologia , Sesquiterpenos/metabolismo
2.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2049: 39-72, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31602604

RESUMO

CRISPR-Cas has proven to be a powerful tool for precision genetic engineering in a variety of difficult genetic systems. In the highly tractable yeast S. cerevisiae, CRISPR-Cas can be used to conduct multiple engineering steps in parallel, allowing for engineering of complex metabolic pathways at multiple genomic loci in as little as 1 week. In addition, CRISPR-Cas can be used to consolidate multiple causal alleles into a single strain, bypassing the laborious traditional methods using marked constructs, or mating. These tools compress the engineering timeline sixfold or more, greatly increasing the productivity of the strain engineer.


Assuntos
Sistemas CRISPR-Cas/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Alelos , Edição de Genes/métodos , Engenharia Genética/métodos , RNA Guia de Cinetoplastídeos/metabolismo , Biologia Sintética/métodos
3.
Cell Syst ; 1(1): 88-96, 2015 Jul 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27135688

RESUMO

CRISPR-Cas genome engineering in yeast has relied on preparation of complex expression plasmids for multiplexed gene knockouts and point mutations. Here we show that co-transformation of a single linearized plasmid with multiple PCR-generated guide RNA (gRNA) and donor DNA cassettes facilitates high-efficiency multiplexed integration of point mutations and large constructs. This technique allowed recovery of marker-less triple-engineering events with 64% efficiency without selection for expression of all gRNAs. The gRNA cassettes can be easily made by PCR and delivered in any combination. We employed this method to rapidly phenotype up to five specific allele combinations and identify synergistic effects. To prototype a pathway for the production of muconic acid, we integrated six DNA fragments totaling 24 kb across three loci in naive Saccharomyces cerevisiae in a single transformation. With minor modifications, we integrated a similar pathway in Kluyveromyces lactis. The flexibility afforded by combinatorial gRNA delivery dramatically accelerates complex strain engineering for basic research and industrial fermentation.

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