Identification, characterization, and application of a highly sensitive lactam biosensor from <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> — Mitchell G. Thompson (2019) | RDL Network
Identification, characterization, and application of a highly sensitive lactam biosensor from <i>Pseudomonas putida</i>
Preprint 2019 en
Authors
MT
Mitchell G. Thompson
AP
Allison N. Pearson
JB
Jesus F. Barajas
Abstract
1 min read
ABSTRACT Caprolactam is an important polymer precursor to nylon traditionally derived from petroleum and produced on a scale of 5 million tons per year. Current biological pathways for the production of caprolactam are inefficient with titers not exceeding 2 mg/L, necessitating novel pathways for its production. As development of novel metabolic routes often require thousands of designs and result in low product titers, a highly sensitive biosensor for the final product has the potential to rapidly speed up development times. Here we report a highly sensitive biosensor for valerolactam and caprolactam from Pseudomonas putida KT2440 which is >1000x more sensitive to exogenous ligand than previously reported sensors. Manipulating the expression of the sensor oplR (PP_3516) substantially altered the sensing parameters, with various vectors showing K d values ranging from 700 nM (79.1 μg/L) to 1.2 mM (135.6 mg/L). Our most sensitive construct was able to detect in vivo production of caprolactam above background at ~6 μg/L. The high sensitivity and range of OplR is a powerful tool towards the development of novel routes to the biological synthesis of caprolactam.
Mitchell G. Thompson, Allison N. Pearson, Jesus F. Barajas, Pablo Cruz‐Morales, Nima Sedaghatian, Zak Costello, Megan E. Garber, Matthew R. Incha, Luis E. Valencia, Edward E. K. Baidoo, Héctor García Martín, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Jay D Keasling
Mitchell G. Thompson, Luis E. Valencia, Jacquelyn M. Blake-Hedges, Pablo Cruz‐Morales, Alexandria E. Velasquez, Allison N. Pearson, Lauren N. Sermeno, William A. Sharpless, Veronica T. Benites, Yan Chen, Edward E. K. Baidoo, Christopher J. Petzold, Adam M. Deutschbauer, Jay D Keasling
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.