Conversion of Escherichia coli to Generate All Biomass Carbon from CO2
Author(s) -
Shmuel Gleizer,
Roee Ben-Nissan,
Yi M. Bar-On,
Niv Antonovsky,
Εlad Noor,
Yehudit Zohar,
Ghil Jona,
Eyal Krieger,
Melina Shamshoum,
Arren BarEven,
Ron Milo
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.11.009
Subject(s) - autotroph , carbon fixation , heterotroph , biology , biomass (ecology) , formate dehydrogenase , commodity chemicals , formate , mixotroph , chemostat , carbon fibers , escherichia coli , rubisco , energy source , environmental chemistry , biochemical engineering , carbon dioxide , photosynthesis , renewable energy , bacteria , ecology , biochemistry , chemistry , genetics , materials science , composite number , gene , engineering , composite material , catalysis
The living world is largely divided into autotrophs that convert CO 2 into biomass and heterotrophs that consume organic compounds. In spite of widespread interest in renewable energy storage and more sustainable food production, the engineering of industrially relevant heterotrophic model organisms to use CO 2 as their sole carbon source has so far remained an outstanding challenge. Here, we report the achievement of this transformation on laboratory timescales. We constructed and evolved Escherichia coli to produce all its biomass carbon from CO 2 . Reducing power and energy, but not carbon, are supplied via the one-carbon molecule formate, which can be produced electrochemically. Rubisco and phosphoribulokinase were co-expressed with formate dehydrogenase to enable CO 2 fixation and reduction via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle. Autotrophic growth was achieved following several months of continuous laboratory evolution in a chemostat under intensifying organic carbon limitation and confirmed via isotopic labeling.
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