RB-TnSeq elucidates dicarboxylic-acid-specific catabolism in β-proteobacteria for improved plastic monomer upcycling
Article 2025 en
Authors
AP
Allison N. Pearson
JL
Julie Lynch
CH
Cindy Ho
Abstract
2 min read
ABSTRACT Dicarboxylic acids are key components of many polymers and plastics, making them a target for both engineered microbial degradation and sustainable bioproduction. In this study, we generated a comprehensive data set of functional evidence for the genetic basis of dicarboxylic and fatty acid metabolism using randomly barcoded transposon sequencing (RB-TnSeq). We identified four β-proteobacteria that displayed robust growth with dicarboxylic acid sole carbon source and cultured their mutant libraries with dicarboxylic and fatty acids with carbon chain lengths from C3 to C12. The resulting fitness data suggested that dicarboxylic and fatty acid metabolisms are largely distinct, and different sets of β-oxidation genes are required for catabolizing dicarboxylic versus fatty acids of the same carbon chain lengths. In addition, we identified transcriptional regulators and transporters with strong fitness phenotypes related to dicarboxylic acid utilization. In Ralstonia sp . UNC404CL21Col ( R. CL21 ), we deleted two transcriptional repressors to improve its utilization of short-chain dicarboxylic acids. We exploited the diacid-utilizing catabolism of R. CL21 to upcycle a mock mixture of the dicarboxylic acids produced when polyethylene is oxidized. After introducing a heterologous indigoidine production pathway, this engineered Ralstonia produced 0.56 ± 0.02 g/L indigoidine from a mixture of dicarboxylic acids as a carbon source, demonstrating the potential of R. CL21 to upcycle plastic wastes to products derived from tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates. IMPORTANCE Upcycling the carbon in plastic wastes to value-added products is a promising approach to address the plastic waste and climate crises, and dicarboxylic acid metabolism is an important facet of several approaches. Improving our understanding of the genetic basis of this metabolism has the potential to uncover new enzymes and genetic parts for engineered pathways involving dicarboxylic acids. Our data set is the most comprehensive interrogation of dicarboxylic acid catabolism to date, and this work will be of utility to researchers interested in both plastics bioproduction and upcycling applications.
Allison N. Pearson, Julie Lynch, Cindy Ho, Graham A. Hudson, Jacob B. Roberts, Javier Menasalvas, Aaron A. Vilchez, Matthew R. Incha, Matthias Schmidt, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Adam M. Deutschbauer, Mitchell G. Thompson, Patrick M. Shih, Jay D Keasling
Mitchell G. Thompson, Matthew R. Incha, Allison N. Pearson, Matthias Schmidt, William A. Sharpless, Christopher B. Eiben, Pablo Cruz‐Morales, Jacquelyn M. Blake-Hedges, Yuzhong Liu, Catharine A. Adams, Robert W. Haushalter, Rohith N. Krishna, Patrick Lichtner, Lars M. Blank, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Adam M. Deutschbauer, Patrick M. Shih, Jay D Keasling
Chunjun Zhan, Guangxu Lan, Qingyun Dan, Ning Qin, Allie Pearson, Peter Mellinger, Yuzhong Liu, Zilong Wang, Seokjung Cheong, Chang Dou, Chenyi Li, Robert W. Haushalter, Jay D Keasling
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.