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Analysis of an engineered sulfate reduction pathway and cadmium precipitation on the cell surface — Clifford L. Wang (2001) | RDL Network
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Analysis of an engineered sulfate reduction pathway and cadmium precipitation on the cell surface
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Jay D Keasling
University of California, Berkeley
Analysis of an engineered sulfate reduction pathway and cadmium precipitation on the cell surface
Article
2001
en
Authors
CW
Clifford L. Wang
DC
Douglas S. Clark
Jay D Keasling
University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract We previously have genetically engineered an aerobic sulfate reduction pathway in Escherichia coli for the generation of hydrogen sulfide and demonstrated the pathway's utility in the precipitation of cadmium. To engineer the pathway, the assimilatory sulfate reduction pathway was modified so that cysteine was overproduced. Excess cysteine was then converted by cysteine desulfhydrase to an abundance of hydrogen sulfide, which then reacted with aqueous cadmium to form cadmium sulfide. In this study, observations of various E. coli clones were combined with an analysis of kinetic and transport phenomena. This analysis revealed that cysteine production is the rate‐limiting step in the engineered pathway and provided an explanation for the phenomenon of cell surface precipitation. An analytical model showed that cadmium sulfide must form at the cell surface because the rate of cadmium sulfide formation is extremely fast and the rate of sulfide transport is relatively slow. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biotechnol Bioeng 75: 285–291, 2001.
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