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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Metabolic engineering of a reduced-genome strain of Escherichia coli for L-threonine production.

TLDR
This result demonstrates that the elimination of genes unnecessary for cell growth can increase the productivity of an industrial strain, most likely by reducing the metabolic burden and improving the metabolic efficiency of cells.
Abstract
Deletion of large blocks of nonessential genes that are not needed for metabolic pathways of interest can reduce the production of unwanted by-products, increase genome stability, and streamline metabolism without physiological compromise. Researchers have recently constructed a reduced-genome Escherichia coli strain MDS42 that lacks 14.3% of its chromosome. Here we describe the reengineering of the MDS42 genome to increase the production of the essential amino acid L-threonine. To this end, we over-expressed a feedback-resistant threonine operon (thrA*BC), deleted the genes that encode threonine dehydrogenase (tdh) and threonine transporters (tdcC and sstT), and introduced a mutant threonine exporter (rhtA23) in MDS42. The resulting strain, MDS-205, shows an ~83% increase in L-threonine production when cells are grown by flask fermentation, compared to a wild-type E. coli strain MG1655 engineered with the same threonine-specific modifications described above. And transcriptional analysis revealed the effect of the deletion of non-essential genes on the central metabolism and threonine pathways in MDS-205. This result demonstrates that the elimination of genes unnecessary for cell growth can increase the productivity of an industrial strain, most likely by reducing the metabolic burden and improving the metabolic efficiency of cells.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Systems and synthetic metabolic engineering for amino acid production - the heartbeat of industrial strain development.

TL;DR: This paper presents a new approach to strain engineering for efficient amino acid production, demanding for a global modification of pathway fluxes - a challenge with regard to the high complexity of the underlying metabolism, superimposed by various layers of metabolic and transcriptional control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli: a sustainable industrial platform for bio-based chemical production.

TL;DR: This review focuses on recent efforts devoted to the use of genetically engineered E. coli as a sustainable platform for the production of industrially important biochemicals such as biofuels, organic acids, amino acids, sugar alcohols and biopolymers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expanding the chemical palate of cells by combining systems biology and metabolic engineering.

TL;DR: This review will highlight many of the systems biology enabling technologies that have reduced the design cycle for engineered hosts, highlight major advances in the expanded diversity of products that can be synthesized, and conclude with future prospects in the field of metabolic engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Engineering redox balance through cofactor systems

TL;DR: This review summarizes how cofactor systems can be manipulated to improve redox balance in microbes and recommends a number of approaches for engineering the synthetic balance of a cofactor system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controlled biosynthesis of odd-chain fuels and chemicals via engineered modular metabolic pathways

TL;DR: The bypass strategy was effective even without the presence of freely membrane-diffusible substrates, and should prove useful for optimization of other pathways that use CoA-derivatized intermediates, including fatty acid β-oxidation and the mevalonate pathway for isoprenoid synthesis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

One-step inactivation of chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli K-12 using PCR products

TL;DR: A simple and highly efficient method to disrupt chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli in which PCR primers provide the homology to the targeted gene(s), which should be widely useful, especially in genome analysis of E. coli and other bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Complete Genome Sequence of Escherichia coli K-12

TL;DR: The 4,639,221-base pair sequence of Escherichia coli K-12 is presented and reveals ubiquitous as well as narrowly distributed gene families; many families of similar genes within E. coli are also evident.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recombinant protein expression in Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: Recent progress in the fundamental understanding of transcription, translation, and protein folding in E. coli, together with serendipitous discoveries and the availability of improved genetic tools are making this bacterium more valuable than ever for the expression of complex eukaryotic proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recombinant protein folding and misfolding in Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: The past 20 years have seen enormous progress in the understanding of the mechanisms used by the enteric bacterium Escherichia coli to promote protein folding, support protein translocation and handle protein misfolding, and these insights have been exploited to tackle the problems of inclusion body formation, proteolytic degradation and disulfide bond generation.
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