A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation

Abstract Background A fundamental problem associated with E. coli fermentations is the difficulty in achieving high cell densities in batch cultures, attributed in large part to the production and accumulation of acetate through a phenomenon known as overflow metabolism when supplying enough glucose...

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Main Authors: Michael Sibley, John M. Ward
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Microbial Cell Factories
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-021-01634-y
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spelling doaj-f54457e37f4e42a2b4effa81e7ddfa672021-07-25T11:43:32ZengBMCMicrobial Cell Factories1475-28592021-07-0120111610.1186/s12934-021-01634-yA cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentationMichael Sibley0John M. Ward1Department of Biochemical Engineering, UCLDepartment of Biochemical Engineering, UCLAbstract Background A fundamental problem associated with E. coli fermentations is the difficulty in achieving high cell densities in batch cultures, attributed in large part to the production and accumulation of acetate through a phenomenon known as overflow metabolism when supplying enough glucose for the cell density desired. Although a fed-batch configuration is the standard method for reducing such issues, traditional fed-batch systems require components which become problematic when applying them at smaller scale. One alternative has been the development of a system whereby the enzymatic degradation of starch is used to release glucose at a controlled rate. However, to date, amylolytic enzymes have only been applied to the culture exogenously, whereas our goal is to design and construct a self-secreting amylolytic chassis capable of self-regulated enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation. Results A putative glucoamylase from C. violaceum has been cloned and expressed in E. coli BL21(DE3) and W3110, which exhibits significant glucose releasing amylolytic activity. Extracellular amylolytic activity was enhanced following a replacement of the enzymes native signal peptide with the DsbA signal sequence, contributing to a glucoamylase secreting strain capable of utilising starch as a sole carbon source in defined media. Introduction of PcstA, a glucose sensitive K12 compatible promoter, and the incorporation of this alongside C. violaceum glucoamylase in E. coli W3110, gave rise to increased cell densities in cultures grown on starch (OD600 ∼ 30) compared to those grown on an equivalent amount of glucose (OD600 ∼ 15). Lastly, a novel self-secreting enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation system was demonstrated via the simultaneous expression of the C. violaceum glucoamylase and a recombinant protein of interest (eGFP), resulting in a fourfold increase in yield when grown in media containing starch compared with the glucose equivalent. Conclusions This study has developed, through the secretion of a previously uncharacterised bacterial glucoamylase, a novel amylolytic E. coli strain capable of direct starch to glucose conversion. The ability of this strain to achieve increased cell densities as well as an associated increase in recombinant protein yield when grown on starch compared with an equivalent amount of glucose, demonstrates for the first time a cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-021-01634-yEnzyme-based fed-batch fermentationBacterial glucoamylaseStarch to glucose conversionCell engineering for bioprocess
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Sibley
John M. Ward
spellingShingle Michael Sibley
John M. Ward
A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
Microbial Cell Factories
Enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
Bacterial glucoamylase
Starch to glucose conversion
Cell engineering for bioprocess
author_facet Michael Sibley
John M. Ward
author_sort Michael Sibley
title A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
title_short A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
title_full A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
title_fullStr A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
title_full_unstemmed A cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
title_sort cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
publisher BMC
series Microbial Cell Factories
issn 1475-2859
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background A fundamental problem associated with E. coli fermentations is the difficulty in achieving high cell densities in batch cultures, attributed in large part to the production and accumulation of acetate through a phenomenon known as overflow metabolism when supplying enough glucose for the cell density desired. Although a fed-batch configuration is the standard method for reducing such issues, traditional fed-batch systems require components which become problematic when applying them at smaller scale. One alternative has been the development of a system whereby the enzymatic degradation of starch is used to release glucose at a controlled rate. However, to date, amylolytic enzymes have only been applied to the culture exogenously, whereas our goal is to design and construct a self-secreting amylolytic chassis capable of self-regulated enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation. Results A putative glucoamylase from C. violaceum has been cloned and expressed in E. coli BL21(DE3) and W3110, which exhibits significant glucose releasing amylolytic activity. Extracellular amylolytic activity was enhanced following a replacement of the enzymes native signal peptide with the DsbA signal sequence, contributing to a glucoamylase secreting strain capable of utilising starch as a sole carbon source in defined media. Introduction of PcstA, a glucose sensitive K12 compatible promoter, and the incorporation of this alongside C. violaceum glucoamylase in E. coli W3110, gave rise to increased cell densities in cultures grown on starch (OD600 ∼ 30) compared to those grown on an equivalent amount of glucose (OD600 ∼ 15). Lastly, a novel self-secreting enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation system was demonstrated via the simultaneous expression of the C. violaceum glucoamylase and a recombinant protein of interest (eGFP), resulting in a fourfold increase in yield when grown in media containing starch compared with the glucose equivalent. Conclusions This study has developed, through the secretion of a previously uncharacterised bacterial glucoamylase, a novel amylolytic E. coli strain capable of direct starch to glucose conversion. The ability of this strain to achieve increased cell densities as well as an associated increase in recombinant protein yield when grown on starch compared with an equivalent amount of glucose, demonstrates for the first time a cell engineering approach to enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation.
topic Enzyme-based fed-batch fermentation
Bacterial glucoamylase
Starch to glucose conversion
Cell engineering for bioprocess
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-021-01634-y
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