4.2 Article

Cell-free biosynthesis of limonene using enzyme-enriched Escherichia coli lysates

Journal

SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/synbio/ysz003

Keywords

cell-free metabolic engineering; limonene; metabolic pathway prototyping; cell-free synthetic biology; E. coli crude lysate

Funding

  1. Department of Energy (BER grant) [DE-SC0018249]
  2. Joint Genome Institute Community Science Program [503280]
  3. David and Lucile Packard Foundation [2011-37152]
  4. Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Program
  5. Northwestern Molecular Biophysics Training Program - National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) of the National Institutes of Health [5T32 GM008382]

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Isoprenoids are an attractive class of metabolites for enzymatic synthesis from renewable substrates. However, metabolic engineering of microorganisms for monoterpenoid production is limited by the need for time-consuming, and often nonintuitive, combinatorial tuning of biosynthetic pathway variations to meet design criteria. Towards alleviating this limitation, the goal of this work was to build a modular, cell-free platform for construction and testing of monoterpenoid pathways, using the fragrance and flavoring molecule limonene as a model. In this platform, multiple Escherichia coli lysates, each enriched with a single overexpressed pathway enzyme, are mixed to construct the full biosynthetic pathway. First, we show the ability to synthesize limonene from six enriched lysates with mevalonate substrate, an adenosine triphosphate (ATP) source, and cofactors. Next, we extend the pathway to use glucose as a substrate, which relies on native metabolism in the extract to convert glucose to acetyl-CoA along with three additional enzymes to convert acetyl-CoA to mevalonate. We find that the native E. coli farnesyl diphosphate synthase (IspA) is active in the lysate and diverts flux from the pathway intermediate geranyl pyrophospahte to farnesyl pyrophsophate and the byproduct farnesol. By adjusting the relative levels of cofactors NAD(+), ATP and CoA, the system can synthesize 0.66mM (90.2 mgl(-1)) limonene over 24 h, a productivity of 3.8mgl(-1) h(-1). Our results highlight the flexibility of crude lysates to sustain complex metabolismand, by activating a glucose-to-limonene pathway with 9 heterologous enzymes encompassing 20 biosynthetic steps, expands an approach of using enzyme-enriched lysates for constructing, characterizing and prototyping enzymatic pathways.

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