Metabolic Engineering Communications (Dec 2016)

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae pheromone-response is a metabolically active stationary phase for bio-production

  • Thomas C. Williams,
  • Bingyin Peng,
  • Claudia E. Vickers,
  • Lars K. Nielsen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
pp. 142 – 152

Abstract

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The growth characteristics and underlying metabolism of microbial production hosts are critical to the productivity of metabolically engineered pathways. Production in parallel with growth often leads to biomass/bio-product competition for carbon. The growth arrest phenotype associated with the Saccharomyces cerevisiae pheromone-response is potentially an attractive production phase because it offers the possibility of decoupling production from population growth. However, little is known about the metabolic phenotype associated with the pheromone-response, which has not been tested for suitability as a production phase. Analysis of extracellular metabolite fluxes, available transcriptomic data, and heterologous compound production (para-hydroxybenzoic acid) demonstrate that a highly active and distinct metabolism underlies the pheromone-response. These results indicate that the pheromone-response is a suitable production phase, and that it may be useful for informing synthetic biology design principles for engineering productive stationary phase phenotypes. Keywords: Synthetic biology, Mating, Metabolic productivity, Yeast, Shikimate, Dynamic regulation, Metabolic engineering, Stationary phase