(Press-News.org) Contact information: Lynn Yarris
lcyarris@lbl.gov
510-486-5375
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Less toxic metabolites, more chemical product
Joint BioEnergy Institute researchers develop dynamic system for controlling toxic metabolites in engineered microbes
The first dynamic regulatory system that prevents the build-up of toxic metabolites in engineered microbes has been reported by a team of researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI). The JBEI researchers used their system to double the production in Escherichia coli (E. coli) of amorphadiene, a precursor to the premier antimalarial drug artemisinin.
Using genome-wide transcriptional analysis, the JBEI researchers identified native regions of DNA – called "promoters" – in E. coli that respond to toxic metabolites by promoting the expression of protective genes. They then developed a system based on these promoters for regulating artificial metabolic pathways engineered into the E. coli to enable the bacterium to produce amorphadiene.
"Static regulators of toxic metabolite levels have been developed but this is the first metabolite regulator that responds to changes in microbial growth and environmental conditions," says Jay Keasling, CEO of JBEI and ranking authority on synthetic biology, who led this research. "Control systems that can sense and respond to environmental or growth changes are needed for the optimal production of a desired chemical."
Keasling, who also serves as Associate Laboratory Director of Biosciences at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), the lead institute in the JBEI partnership, is the corresponding author of a paper describing this research in the journal Nature Biotechnology. The paper is titled "Engineering dynamic pathway regulation using stress-response promoters." Co-authors are Robert Dahl, Fuzhong Zhang, Jorge Alonso-Gutierrez, Edward Baidoo, Tanveer Batth, Alyssa Redding-Johanson, Christopher Petzold, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Taek Soon Lee and Paul Adams.
From life-saving drugs, such as artemisinin, to sustainable, green biofuels, the metabolic engineering of microbes for the production of valuable chemicals continues to grow in importance. To date, the most productive microbial hosts have been those engineered with heterologous pathways for which they have little or no native regula¬tion of the metabolites being expressed. However, such unregulated expression of heterologous enzymes can be toxic to the host, which can limit the production of the target chemical to well below levels that could be obtained.
"Although synthetic biology has made great strides in creating novel, dynamic genetic circuits, most control systems for heterologous metabolic pathways still rely on inducible or constitutive pro¬moters," Keasling says. "Approaches developed to tailor expression strength by means of promoter libraries, mRNA stability or ribosome-binding are optimized for a particular growth phase or condition in the bioreactor, however, growth and environmental conditions change during the fermentation process."
Since the accumulation of intermediate metabolites to toxic levels in a microbe during a fermentation process can lead to a stress response, Keasling and his JBEI colleagues reasoned that
it should be possible to tap a host microbe's native stress response system when metabolites accumulate. Transcript profiling of the E. coli genome allowed them to evaluate transcrip¬tional response to a heterologous pathway and create a list of promoters that could be used to respond to intermediate toxicity.
"Using such promoters to regulate pathway expression in response to the toxic intermediate metabolites creates a link between the cell's metabolic state and the expression of the metabolic pathway," Keasling says. "This enables us to create biosensors that respond to and regulate pathway intermediates. In silico models have indicated, and we've demonstrated in this study that our approach can be used to improve production of a desired chemical over common inducible promoters and constitutive promoters of various strengths."
Keasling and his colleagues believe their dynamic approach to metabolite regulation could be extended to higher organisms as well, where constitutive promot¬ers are still commonly used. This holds potential for – among other things - improving the accumulation of nutrients in food crops, or decreasing the lignin in energy crops that makes extraction of fuel sugars difficult and expensive.
"What we're looking at are strategies that could help reduce the problems associated with feeding a larger global population or efficiently converting biomass into renewable fuels," Keasling says.
INFORMATION:
This research was supported by the DOE Office of Science.
Additional Information
For more about the Joint BioEnergy Institute go here
JBEI is one of three Bioenergy Research Centers established by the DOE's Office of Science in 2007. It is a scientific partnership led by Berkeley Lab and includes the Sandia National Laboratories, the University of California campuses of Berkeley and Davis, the Carnegie Institution for Science, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. DOE's Bioenergy Research Centers support multidisciplinary, multi-institutional research teams pursuing the fundamental scientific breakthroughs needed to make production of cellulosic biofuels, or biofuels from nonfood plant fiber, cost-effective on a national scale.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory addresses the world's most urgent scientific challenges by advancing sustainable energy, protecting human health, creating new materials, and revealing the origin and fate of the universe. Founded in 1931, Berkeley Lab's scientific expertise has been recognized with 13 Nobel prizes. The University of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. For more, visit http://www.lbl.gov.
DOE's Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the Unites States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit the Office of Science website at science.energy.gov.
Less toxic metabolites, more chemical product
Joint BioEnergy Institute researchers develop dynamic system for controlling toxic metabolites in engineered microbes
2013-10-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
USC CTM releases report on Americans' media consumption
2013-10-29
USC CTM releases report on Americans' media consumption
Predicts by 2015, average media consumption will be 15.5 hours a day per person
Americans consume an enormous amount of media daily via television, radio, phone and computer. As you read this article ...
Canadian discoveries pivotal to the science of toxins and illness associated with E. coli
2013-10-29
Canadian discoveries pivotal to the science of toxins and illness associated with E. coli
A tribute to Canadian researchers among the first to recognize the toxin-producing E. coli published today in the Canadian Journal of Microbiology
Many ...
Sedentary behavior linked to recurrence of precancerous colorectal tumors
2013-10-29
Sedentary behavior linked to recurrence of precancerous colorectal tumors
Men who spend the most time engaged in sedentary behaviors are at greatest risk for recurrence of colorectal adenomas, benign tumors that are known precursors ...
Estrogen protects women with NASH from severe liver fibrosis
2013-10-29
Estrogen protects women with NASH from severe liver fibrosis
Severity of fibrosis similar in men and post-menopausal women
New research suggests that estrogen protects women with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) from severe liver fibrosis. According to the study published ...
Weight at time of diagnosis linked to prostate cancer mortality
2013-10-29
Weight at time of diagnosis linked to prostate cancer mortality
Men who are overweight or obese when they are diagnosed with prostate cancer are more likely to die from the disease than men who are of healthy weight, according to a Kaiser Permanente study published ...
UCLA report urges new global policy effort to tackle crisis of plastic litter in oceans
2013-10-29
UCLA report urges new global policy effort to tackle crisis of plastic litter in oceans
Plastic litter is one of the most significant problems facing the world's marine environments. Yet in the absence of a coordinated global strategy, an estimated ...
Scientists find that dolphin in Australian waters is a new species
2013-10-29
Scientists find that dolphin in Australian waters is a new species
Study of humpback dolphin in Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific waters finds as-of-yet unnamed species
A species of humpback dolphin previously unknown to science is swimming in the waters off northern ...
NASA sees Tropical Storm Raymond fading fast
2013-10-29
NASA sees Tropical Storm Raymond fading fast
Satellite data showed some recent convective activity within Tropical Storm Raymond on Oct. 28 but southwesterly wind shear and cooler ocean temperatures are predicted by the National Hurricane Center to weaken the ...
NASA sees newborn twenty-ninth Depression in the Philippine Sea
2013-10-29
NASA sees newborn twenty-ninth Depression in the Philippine Sea
NASA infrared imagery revealed that bands of thunderstorms have been wrapping into the center of newborn Tropical Depression 29W, indicating it's organizing and strengthening in the Philippine Sea.
The ...
Redwood trees reveal history of West Coast rain, fog, ocean conditions
2013-10-29
Redwood trees reveal history of West Coast rain, fog, ocean conditions
Many people use tree ring records to see into the past. But redwoods – the iconic trees that are the world's tallest living things – have so far proven too erratic in their growth patterns to help ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
AI salespeople aren’t better than humans… yet
Millions of men could benefit from faster scan to diagnose prostate cancer
Simulations solve centuries-old cosmic mystery – and discover new class of ancient star systems
MIT study explains how a rare gene variant contributes to Alzheimer’s disease
Race, ethnicity, insurance payer, and pediatric cardiac arrest survival
High-intensity exercise and hippocampal integrity in adults with cannabis use disorder
“Brain dial” for consumption found in mice
Lung cancer rewires immune cells in the bone marrow to weaken body’s defenses
Researchers find key to Antarctic ice loss blowing in the north wind
Ten years after the discovery, gravitational waves verify Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Area Theorem
Researchers uncover potential biosignatures on Mars
Built to learn: how early brain structure primes the brain to learn efficiently
Cells use electricity to eliminate their ‘weakest’ neighbours to maintain healthy protective barriers
New motion-compensation approach delivers sharper single-pixel imaging for dynamic scenes
Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience now officially part of the Canadian Science Publishing portfolio
What motivates runners? Focusing on the “how” rather than the “why”
Researchers capture new antibiotic resistance mechanisms with trace amounts of DNA
New research in JNCCN offers a simplified way to identify harmful medications in older adults with cancer
State school finance reforms increased racial and ethnic funding inequities, new study finds
Endocrine Society honors endocrinology field’s leaders with 2026 Laureate Awards
Decoding high-grade endometrial cancer: a molecular-histologic integration using the Cancer Genome Atlas framework
An exploding black hole could reveal the foundations of the universe
Childhood traumatic events and transgender identity are strongly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in university students
UVA to test if MRI can reveal undetected brain injuries in soldiers
Mount Sinai Morningside unveils new, state-of-the-art facility for patients who need inpatient rehabilitation
BD² announces new funding opportunities focused on biology of bipolar disorder
“Want to, but can’t”: A new model to explain the gap in waste separation behavior
Highly sensitive, next-generation wearable pressure sensors inspired by cat whiskers
Breaking the code of sperm motion: Two proteins found to be vital for male fertility
UC Irvine poll: Californians support stricter tech regulations for children
[Press-News.org] Less toxic metabolites, more chemical productJoint BioEnergy Institute researchers develop dynamic system for controlling toxic metabolites in engineered microbes