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Role of glycolytic intermediate in regulation: Improving lycopene production in Escherichia coli by engineering metabolic control
Author(s) -
William R. Farmer,
James C. Liao
Publication year - 2001
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/842949
Subject(s) - metabolic engineering , metabolic pathway , biology , synthetic biology , flux (metallurgy) , computational biology , functional genomics , metabolic network , metabolic control analysis , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , genetics , genome , genomics , chemistry , organic chemistry , insulin
Metabolic engineering in the postgenomic era is expected to benefit from a full understanding of the biosynthetic capability of microorganisms as a result of the progress being made in bioinformatics and functional genomics. The immediate advantage of such information is to allow the rational design of novel pathways and the elimination of native reactions that are detrimental or unnecessary for the desired purpose. However, with the ability to manipulate metabolic pathways becoming more effective, metabolic engineering will need to face a new challenge: the reengineering of the regulatory hierarchy that controls gene expression in those pathways. In addition to constructing the genetic composition of a metabolic pathway, they propose that it will become just as important to consider the dynamics of pathways gene expression. It has been widely observed that high-level induction of a recombinant protein or pathway leads to growth retardation and reduced metabolic activity. These phenotypic characteristics result from the fact that the constant demands of production placed upon the cell interfere with its changing requirements for growth. They believe that this common situation in metabolic engineering can be alleviated by designing a dynamic controller that is able to sense the metabolic state of the cell and regulate the expression of the recombinant pathway accordingly. This approach, which is termed metabolic control engineering, involves redesigning the native regulatory circuits and applying them to the recombinant pathway. The general goal of such an effort will be to control the flux to the recombinant pathway adaptively according to the cell's metabolic state. The dynamically controlled recombinant pathway can potentially lead to enhanced production, minimized growth retardation, and reduced toxic by-product formation. The regulation of gene expression in response to the physiological state is also essential to the success of gene therapy. Here they illustrate an application of this approach for the enhanced production of lycopene in Escherichia coli. The chose lycopene as a model compound because of its potential beneficial effects on human health. Lycopene, being an effective antioxidant, has been proposed as a possible treatment for some cancers and other degenerative human conditions. As a result, the in vivo synthesis of lycopene and related carotenoids has received increasing attention, and a number of reports have described their production in recombinant microorganism

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