4.7 Article

Pathway Engineering, Re-targeting, and Synthetic Scaffolding Improve the Production of Squalene in Plants

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 2121-2133

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.2c00051

Keywords

squalene; lipid droplet scaffolding; plastid targeting; plastid membrane scaffolding

Funding

  1. Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research [DE-SC0018409, DE-FC02-07ER64494]
  2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from AgBioResearch [MICL02454]

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This study establishes a platform for sustainable production of squalene in plants, which significantly improves the yield compared to previous methods and lays the foundation for the production of higher-value triterpenoids.
Plants are increasingly becoming an option for sustainable bioproduction of chemicals and complex molecules like terpenoids. The triterpene squalene has a variety of biotechnological uses and is the precursor to a diverse array of triterpenoids, but we currently lack a sustainable strategy to produce large quantities for industrial applications. Here, we further establish engineered plants as a platform for production of squalene through pathway re-targeting and membrane scaffolding. The squalene biosynthetic pathway, which natively resides in the cytosol and endoplasmic reticulum, was re-targeted to plastids, where screening of diverse variants of enzymes at key steps improved squalene yields. The highest yielding enzymes were used to create biosynthetic scaffolds on co-engineered, cytosolic lipid droplets, resulting in squalene yields up to 0.58 mg/gFW or 318% higher than a cytosolic pathway without scaffolding during transient expression. These scaffolds were also re-targeted to plastids where they associated with membranes throughout, including the formation of plastoglobules or plastidial lipid droplets. Plastid scaffolding ameliorated the negative effects of squalene biosynthesis and showed up to 345% higher rates of photosynthesis than without scaffolding. This study establishes a platform for engineering the production of squalene in plants, providing the opportunity to expand future work into production of higher-value triterpenoids.

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