Metabolic Engineering Communications (Dec 2022)

Isobutanol production by combined in vivo and in vitro metabolic engineering

  • Mamta Gupta,
  • Matthew Wong,
  • Kamran Jawed,
  • Kamil Gedeon,
  • Hannah Barrett,
  • Marcelo Bassalo,
  • Clifford Morrison,
  • Danish Eqbal,
  • Syed Shams Yazdani,
  • Ryan T. Gill,
  • Jiaqi Huang,
  • Marc Douaisi,
  • Jonathan Dordick,
  • Georges Belfort,
  • Mattheos A.G. Koffas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
p. e00210

Abstract

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The production of the biofuel, isobutanol, in E. coli faces limitations due to alcohol toxicity, product inhibition, product recovery, and long-term industrial feasibility. Here we demonstrate an approach of combining both in vivo with in vitro metabolic engineering to produce isobutanol. The in vivo production of α-ketoisovalerate (KIV) was conducted through CRISPR mediated integration of the KIV pathway in bicistronic design (BCD) in E. coli and inhibition of competitive valine pathway using CRISPRi technology. The subsequent in vitro conversion to isobutanol was carried out with engineered enzymes for 2-ketoacid decarboxylase (KIVD) and alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH). For the in vivo production of KIV and subsequent in vitro production of isobutanol, this two-step serial approach resulted in yields of 56% and 93%, productivities of 0.62 and 0.074 g L−1 h−1, and titers of 5.6 and 1.78 g L−1, respectively. Thus, this combined biosynthetic system can be used as a modular approach for producing important metabolites, like isobutanol, without the limitations associated with in vivo production using a consolidated bioprocess.

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