Affiliation:
1. BioTechnology Institute, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
2. Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Cellular metabolism is a series of tightly linked oxidations and reductions that must be balanced. Recycling of intracellular electron carriers during fermentation often requires substrate conversion to undesired products, while respiration demands constant addition of electron acceptors. The use of electrode-based electron acceptors to balance biotransformations may overcome these constraints. To test this hypothesis, the metal-reducing bacterium
Shewanella oneidensis
was engineered to stoichiometrically convert glycerol into ethanol, a biotransformation that will not occur unless two electrons are removed via an external reaction, such as electrode reduction. Multiple modules were combined into a single plasmid to alter
S. oneidensis
metabolism: a glycerol module, consisting of
glpF
,
glpK
,
glpD
, and
tpiA
from
Escherichia coli
, and an ethanol module containing
pdc
and
adh
from
Zymomonas mobilis
. A further increase in product yields was accomplished through knockout of
pta
, encoding phosphate acetyltransferase, shifting flux toward ethanol and away from acetate production. In this first-generation demonstration, conversion of glycerol to ethanol required the presence of an electrode to balance the reaction, and electrode-linked rates were on par with volumetric conversion rates observed in engineered
E. coli
. Linking microbial biocatalysis to current production can eliminate redox constraints by shifting other unbalanced reactions to yield pure products and serve as a new platform for next-generation bioproduction strategies.
IMPORTANCE
All reactions catalyzed by whole cells or enzymes must achieve redox balance. In rare cases, conversion can be achieved via perfectly balanced fermentations, allowing all electron equivalents to be recovered in a single product. In most biotransformations, organisms must produce a mixture of acids, gasses, and/or alcohols, and no amount of enzyme or strain engineering can overcome this fundamental requirement. Stoichiometric conversion of glycerol, a waste product from biodiesel transesterification, into ethanol and CO
2
with no side products represents such an impossible fermentation, due to the more reduced state of glycerol than of ethanol and CO
2
. The unbalanced conversion of glycerol to ethanol has been viewed as having only two solutions: fermenting glycerol to ethanol and potentially useful coproducts or “burning off” excess electrons via careful introduction of oxygen. Here, we use the glycerol-to-ethanol example to demonstrate a third strategy, using bacteria directly interfaced to electrodes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
144 articles.
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