4.7 Article

Production of cholesterol-like molecules impacts Escherichia coli robustness, production capacity, and vesicle trafficking

Journal

METABOLIC ENGINEERING
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages 134-143

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2022.07.004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2017-67021-26137]
  2. National Sci-ence Foundation Energy for Sustainability program [CBET-1604576]

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The economic viability of bioprocesses is limited by the operating conditions tolerated by the cell factory. Engineering the microbial cell membrane can increase robustness and expand the production capacity. In this study, we produced cholesterol-like molecules using squalene hopene cyclase (SHC) and observed increased tolerance to chemicals and improved membrane trafficking processes. This engineering approach significantly increased the production titers for wax-esters and ethanol.
The economic viability of bioprocesses is constrained by the limited range of operating conditions that can be tolerated by the cell factory. Engineering of the microbial cell membrane is one strategy that can increase robustness and thus alter this range. In this work, we targeted cellular components that contribute to maintenance of appropriate membrane function, such as: flotillin-like proteins, membrane structural proteins, and membrane lipids. Specifically, we exploited the promiscuity of squalene hopene cyclase (SHC) to produce polycyclic terpenoids with properties analogous to cholesterol. Strains producing these cholesterol-like molecules were visualized by AFM and height features were observed. Production of these cholesterol-like molecules was associated with increased tolerance to-wards a diversity of chemicals, particularly alcohols, and membrane trafficking processes such as lipid droplet accumulation and production of extracellular vesicles. This engineering approach improved the production titers for wax-esters and ethanol by 80-and 10-fold, respectively. Expression of SHC resulted in the production of steroids. Strains engineered to also express truncated squalene synthase (tERG9) produced diplopterol and generally did not perform as well. Increased expression of several membrane-associated proteins, such as YqiK, was observed to impact vesicle trafficking and further improve tolerance relative to SHC alone, but did not improve bio-production. Deletion of YbbJ increased lipid droplet accumulation as well as production of intracellular wax esters. This work serves as a proof of concept for engineering strategies targeting membrane physiology and trafficking to expand the production capacity of microbial cell factories.

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