Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli

Abstract Background Salicylate can be biosynthesized from the common metabolic intermediate shikimate and has found applications in pharmaceuticals and in the bioplastics industry. While much metabolic engineering work focused on the shikimate pathway has led to the biosynthesis of a variety of arom...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shuai Qian, Ye Li, Patrick C. Cirino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-01-01
Series:Microbial Cell Factories
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12934-019-1069-1
id doaj-ef512042d3784c4686ba7f0917e3699e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ef512042d3784c4686ba7f0917e3699e2020-11-25T02:38:29ZengBMCMicrobial Cell Factories1475-28592019-01-011811910.1186/s12934-019-1069-1Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coliShuai Qian0Ye Li1Patrick C. Cirino2Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, University of HoustonDepartment of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, University of HoustonDepartment of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, University of HoustonAbstract Background Salicylate can be biosynthesized from the common metabolic intermediate shikimate and has found applications in pharmaceuticals and in the bioplastics industry. While much metabolic engineering work focused on the shikimate pathway has led to the biosynthesis of a variety of aromatic compounds, little is known about how the relative expression levels of pathway components influence salicylate biosynthesis. Furthermore, some host strain gene deletions that improve salicylate production may be impossible to predict. Here, a salicylate-responsive transcription factor was used to optimize the expression levels of shikimate/salicylate pathway genes in recombinant E. coli, and to screen a chromosomal transposon insertion library for improved salicylate production. Results A high-throughput colony screen was first developed based on a previously designed salicylate-responsive variant of the E. coli AraC regulatory protein (“AraC-SA”). Next, a combinatorial library was constructed comprising a series of ribosome binding site sequences corresponding to a range of predicted protein translation initiation rates, for each of six pathway genes (> 38,000 strain candidates). Screening for improved salicylate production allowed for the rapid identification of optimal gene expression patterns, conferring up to 123% improved production of salicylate in shake-flask culture. Finally, transposon mutagenesis and screening revealed that deletion of rnd (encoding RNase D) from the host chromosome further improved salicylate production by 27%. Conclusions These results demonstrate the effectiveness of the salicylate sensor-based screening platform to rapidly identify beneficial gene expression patterns and gene knockout targets for improving production. Such customized high-throughput tools complement other cell factory engineering strategies. This approach can be generalized for the production of other shikimate-derived compounds.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12934-019-1069-1Metabolic engineeringSynthetic biologySalicylateAraCBiosensorHigh-throughput screening
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shuai Qian
Ye Li
Patrick C. Cirino
spellingShingle Shuai Qian
Ye Li
Patrick C. Cirino
Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli
Microbial Cell Factories
Metabolic engineering
Synthetic biology
Salicylate
AraC
Biosensor
High-throughput screening
author_facet Shuai Qian
Ye Li
Patrick C. Cirino
author_sort Shuai Qian
title Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli
title_short Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli
title_full Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli
title_fullStr Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli
title_full_unstemmed Biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant Escherichia coli
title_sort biosensor-guided improvements in salicylate production by recombinant escherichia coli
publisher BMC
series Microbial Cell Factories
issn 1475-2859
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Abstract Background Salicylate can be biosynthesized from the common metabolic intermediate shikimate and has found applications in pharmaceuticals and in the bioplastics industry. While much metabolic engineering work focused on the shikimate pathway has led to the biosynthesis of a variety of aromatic compounds, little is known about how the relative expression levels of pathway components influence salicylate biosynthesis. Furthermore, some host strain gene deletions that improve salicylate production may be impossible to predict. Here, a salicylate-responsive transcription factor was used to optimize the expression levels of shikimate/salicylate pathway genes in recombinant E. coli, and to screen a chromosomal transposon insertion library for improved salicylate production. Results A high-throughput colony screen was first developed based on a previously designed salicylate-responsive variant of the E. coli AraC regulatory protein (“AraC-SA”). Next, a combinatorial library was constructed comprising a series of ribosome binding site sequences corresponding to a range of predicted protein translation initiation rates, for each of six pathway genes (> 38,000 strain candidates). Screening for improved salicylate production allowed for the rapid identification of optimal gene expression patterns, conferring up to 123% improved production of salicylate in shake-flask culture. Finally, transposon mutagenesis and screening revealed that deletion of rnd (encoding RNase D) from the host chromosome further improved salicylate production by 27%. Conclusions These results demonstrate the effectiveness of the salicylate sensor-based screening platform to rapidly identify beneficial gene expression patterns and gene knockout targets for improving production. Such customized high-throughput tools complement other cell factory engineering strategies. This approach can be generalized for the production of other shikimate-derived compounds.
topic Metabolic engineering
Synthetic biology
Salicylate
AraC
Biosensor
High-throughput screening
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12934-019-1069-1
work_keys_str_mv AT shuaiqian biosensorguidedimprovementsinsalicylateproductionbyrecombinantescherichiacoli
AT yeli biosensorguidedimprovementsinsalicylateproductionbyrecombinantescherichiacoli
AT patrickccirino biosensorguidedimprovementsinsalicylateproductionbyrecombinantescherichiacoli
_version_ 1724790668582191104