Microbial Biotechnology (Apr 2024)

Adaptive laboratory evolution of Clostridium autoethanogenum to metabolize CO2 and H2 enhances growth rates in chemostat and unravels proteome and metabolome alterations

  • James Heffernan,
  • R. Axayactl Garcia Gonzalez,
  • Vishnu Mahamkali,
  • Tim McCubbin,
  • Dara Daygon,
  • Lian Liu,
  • Robin Palfreyman,
  • Audrey Harris,
  • Michael Koepke,
  • Kaspar Valgepea,
  • Lars Keld Nielsen,
  • Esteban Marcellin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.14452
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Gas fermentation of CO2 and H2 is an attractive means to sustainably produce fuels and chemicals. Clostridium autoethanogenum is a model organism for industrial CO to ethanol and presents an opportunity for CO2‐to‐ethanol processes. As we have previously characterized its CO2/H2 chemostat growth, here we use adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE) with the aim of improving growth with CO2/H2. Seven ALE lineages were generated, all with improved specific growth rates. ALE conducted in the presence of 2% CO along with CO2/H2 generated Evolved lineage D, which showed the highest ethanol titres amongst all the ALE lineages during the fermentation of CO2/H2. Chemostat comparison against the parental strain shows no change in acetate or ethanol production, while Evolved D could achieve a higher maximum dilution rate. Multi‐omics analyses at steady state revealed that Evolved D has widespread proteome and intracellular metabolome changes. However, the uptake and production rates and titres remain unaltered until investigating their maximum dilution rate. Yet, we provide numerous insights into CO2/H2 metabolism via these multi‐omics data and link these results to mutations, suggesting novel targets for metabolic engineering in this bacterium.