An Orthogonal and pH-Tunable Sensor-Selector for Muconic Acid Biosynthesis in Yeast
Article 2018 en
Authors
TS
Tim Snoek
DR
David Romero-Suárez
JZ
Jie Zhang
Abstract
1 min read
Microbes offer enormous potential for production of industrially relevant chemicals and therapeutics, yet the rapid identification of high-producing microbes from large genetic libraries is a major bottleneck in modern cell factory development. Here, we develop and apply a synthetic selection system in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that couples the concentration of muconic acid, a plastic precursor, to cell fitness by using the prokaryotic transcriptional regulator BenM driving an antibiotic resistance gene. We show that the sensor-selector does not affect production nor fitness, and find that tuning pH of the cultivation medium limits the rise of nonproducing cheaters. We apply the sensor-selector to selectively enrich for best-producing variants out of a large library of muconic acid production strains, and identify an isolate that produces more than 2 g/L muconic acid in a bioreactor. We expect that this sensor-selector can aid the development of other synthetic selection systems based on allosteric transcription factors.
Tim Snoek, Evan Kirk Chaberski, Francesca Ambri, Stefan Kol, Sara Petersen Bjørn, Bo Pang, Jesus F. Barajas, Ditte Hededam Welner, Michael K. Jensen, Jay D Keasling
Tim Snoek, Evan Kirk Chaberski, Francesca Ambri, Stefan Kol, Sara Petersen Bjørn, Bo Pang, Jesus F. Barajas, Ditte Hededam Welner, Michael K. Jensen, Jay D Keasling
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