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Combinatorial pathway optimization in Escherichia coli by directed co‐evolution of rate‐limiting enzymes and modular pathway engineering
Author(s) -
Lv Xiaomei,
Gu Jiali,
Wang Fan,
Xie Wenping,
Liu Min,
Ye Lidan,
Yu Hongwei
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
biotechnology and bioengineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.136
H-Index - 189
eISSN - 1097-0290
pISSN - 0006-3592
DOI - 10.1002/bit.26034
Subject(s) - metabolic engineering , isoprene , protein engineering , synthetic biology , biochemistry , metabolic pathway , enzyme , mevalonate pathway , escherichia coli , biosynthesis , directed evolution , chemistry , heterologous , overproduction , computational biology , biology , gene , mutant , organic chemistry , copolymer , polymer
Metabolic engineering of microorganisms for heterologous biosynthesis is a promising route to sustainable chemical production which attracts increasing research and industrial interest. However, the efficiency of microbial biosynthesis is often restricted by insufficient activity of pathway enzymes and unbalanced utilization of metabolic intermediates. This work presents a combinatorial strategy integrating modification of multiple rate‐limiting enzymes and modular pathway engineering to simultaneously improve intra‐ and inter‐pathway balance, which might be applicable for a range of products, using isoprene as an example product. For intra‐module engineering within the methylerythritol‐phosphate (MEP) pathway, directed co‐evolution of DXS/DXR/IDI was performed adopting a lycopene‐indicated high‐throughput screening method developed herein, leading to 60% improvement of isoprene production. In addition, inter‐module engineering between the upstream MEP pathway and the downstream isoprene‐forming pathway was conducted via promoter manipulation, which further increased isoprene production by 2.94‐fold compared to the recombinant strain with solely protein engineering and 4.7‐fold compared to the control strain containing wild‐type enzymes. These results demonstrated the potential of pathway optimization in isoprene overproduction as well as the effectiveness of combining metabolic regulation and protein engineering in improvement of microbial biosynthesis. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2016;113: 2661–2669. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.