4.7 Article

Enhanced production of polyhydroxyalkanoates in Pseudomonas putida KT2440 by a combination of genome streamlining and promoter engineering

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Volume 209, Issue -, Pages 117-124

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2022.04.004

Keywords

Pseudomonas putida KT2440; Polyhydroxyalkanoate; Genome streamlining; Promoter engineering; Minimal genome cell factories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32101171]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0900100]

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A novel strategy of genome streamlining combined with promoter engineering was developed in P. putida KT2440 for constructing the minimal genome cell factories (MGF) capable of efficiently producing medium-chain-length PHA (mcl-PHA). The highest PHA yield with P. putida KT2440 was obtained with the optimized genome strain KTU-U27Agcd-P46CA, suggesting the feasibility of genome streamlining in synthetic biology applications.
Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs), a class of bioplastics produced by a variety of microorganisms, have become the ideal alternatives for oil-derived plastics due to their superior physicochemical and material characteristics. Pseudomonas putida KT2440 can produce medium-chain-length PHA (mcl-PHA) from various substrates. In this study, a novel strategy of the large-scale deletion of genomic islands (GIs) coupling with promoter engineering was developed in P. putida KT2440 for constructing the minimal genome cell factories (MGF) capable of effi-ciently producing mcl-PHA. Firstly, P. putida KTU-U13, a 13 GIs-and upp-deleted mutant derived from the parental strain P. putida KT2440, was used as a starting strain for further deletion of GIs to generate a series of genome-reduced strains. Subsequently, the two minimal genome strains KTU-U24 and KTU-U27, which had a 7.19% and 8.35% reduction relative to the genome size of KT2440 and were advantageous over the strain KTU (KT2440Aupp) and KTU-U13 in several physiological traits such as the maximum specific growth rate, plasmid transformation efficiency, heterologous protein expression capacity and PHA production capacity, were selected as the chassis cells for PHA metabolic engineering. To prevent the formation of the by-product gluconic acid, the glucose dehydrogenase gene was deleted in KTU-U24 and KTU-U27, resulting in KTU-U24Agcd and KTU-U27Agcd. To enhance the transcriptional level of PHA synthase genes (phaC) and the supply of the precursor acetyl-CoA, a strong endogenous promoter P46 was inserted into upstream of the phaC operon and pyruvate dehydrogenase gene in the genome of KTU-U24Agcd and KTU-U27Agcd, to generate KTU-U24Agcd-P46CA and KTU-U27Agcd-P46CA, with the PHA yield of 50.5 wt% and 53.8 wt% (weight percent of PHA in cell dry weight). Finally, KTU-U27Agcd-P46CA, the most minimal KT2440 chassis currently available, was able to accumulate the PHA to 55.82 wt% in a 5-l fermentor, which is the highest PHA yield obtained with P. putida KT2440 so far. This study suggests that genome streamlining in combination with promoter engineering may be a feasible strategy for the development of the MGF for the efficient production of high value products. Moreover, further stream-lining of the P. putida KT2440 genome has great potential to create the optimal chassis for synthetic biology applications.

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