4.7 Article

Improved Stability of Engineered Ammonia Production in the Plant-Symbiont Azospirillum brasilense

期刊

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
卷 10, 期 11, 页码 2982-2996

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.1c00287

关键词

associative diazotroph; ammonia; glutamine synthetase; stability; genetic redundancy; Zea mays

资金

  1. Stanford University Departments of Bioengineering and Chemical Engineering, Stanford Bio-X, Ric Weiland Fellowships
  2. HHMI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Bioavailable nitrogen is crucial for agricultural food production, and engineered diazotrophs show potential for plant growth promotion. However, balancing ammonia production rates and fitness defects is important. Multi-copy stable strains of Azospirillum brasilense exhibit improved plant growth promotion in hydroponic conditions, but their effectiveness in nonsterile soil may be limited.
Bioavailable nitrogen is the limiting nutrient for most agricultural food production. Associative diazotrophs can colonize crop roots and fix their own bioavailable nitrogen from the atmosphere. Wild-type (WT) associative diazotrophs, however, do not release fixed nitrogen in culture and are not known to directly transfer fixed nitrogen resources to plants. Efforts to engineer diazotrophs for plant nitrogen provision as an alternative to chemical fertilization have yielded several strains that transiently release ammonia. However, these strains suffer from selection pressure for nonproducers, which rapidly deplete ammonia accumulating in culture, likely limiting their potential for plant growth promotion (PGP). Here we report engineered Azospirillum brasilense strains with significantly extend ammonia production lifetimes of up to 32 days in culture. Our approach relies on multicopy genetic redundancy of a unidirectional adenylyltransferase (uAT) as a posttranslational mechanism to induce ammonia release via glutamine synthetase deactivation. Testing our multicopy stable strains with the model monocot Setaria viridis in hydroponic monoassociation reveals improvement in plant growth promotion compared to single copy strains. In contrast, inoculation of Zea mays in nitrogen-poor, nonsterile soil does not lead to increased PGP relative to WT, suggesting strain health, resource competition, or colonization capacity in soil may also be limiting factors. In this context, we show that while engineered strains fix more nitrogen per cell compared to WT strains, the expression strength of multiple uAT copies needs to be carefully balanced to maximize ammonia production rates and avoid excessive fitness defects caused by excessive glutamine synthetase shutdown.

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