04 Fakultät Energie-, Verfahrens- und Biotechnik
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/5
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Item Open Access A timed off-switch for dynamic control of gene expression in Corynebacterium glutamicum(2021) Siebert, Daniel; Altenbuchner, Josef; Blombach, BastianDynamic control of gene expression mainly relies on inducible systems, which require supplementation of (costly) inducer molecules. In contrast, synthetic regulatory circuits, which allow the timed shutdown of gene expression, are rarely available and therefore represent highly attractive tools for metabolic engineering. To achieve this, we utilized the VanR/PvanABK* regulatory system of Corynebacterium glutamicum, which consists of the transcriptional repressor VanR and a modified promoter of the vanABK operon (PvanABK*). VanR activity is modulated by one of the phenolic compounds ferulic acid, vanillin or vanillic acid, which are co-metabolized with d-glucose. Thus, gene expression in the presence of d-glucose is turned off if one of the effector molecules is depleted from the medium. To dynamically control the expression of the aceE gene, encoding the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex that is essential for growth on d-glucose, we replaced the native promoter by vanR/PvanABK* yielding C. glutamicum ΔPaceE::vanR-PvanABK*. The biomass yield of this strain increased linearly with the supplemented amount of effector. After consumption of the phenolic compounds growth ceased, however, C. glutamicumΔPaceE::vanR-PvanABK* continued to utilize the residual d-glucose to produce significant amounts of pyruvate, l-alanine, and l-valine. Interestingly, equimolar concentrations of the three phenolic compounds resulted in different biomass yields; and with increasing effector concentration, the product spectrum shifted from pyruvate over l-alanine to l-valine. To further test the suitability of the VanR/PvanABK* system, we overexpressed the l-valine biosynthesis genes ilvBNCE in C. glutamicum ΔPaceE::vanR-PvanABK*, which resulted in efficient l-valine production with a yield of about 0.36 mol l-valine per mol d-glucose. These results demonstrate that the VanR/PvanABK* system is a valuable tool to control gene expression in C. glutamicum in a timed manner by the cheap and abundant phenolic compounds ferulic acid, vanillin, and vanillic acid.Item Open Access Comprehensive analysis of C. glutamicum anaplerotic deletion mutants under defined d-glucose conditions(2021) Kappelmann, Jannick; Klein, Bianca; Papenfuß, Mathias; Lange, Julian; Blombach, Bastian; Takors, Ralf; Wiechert, Wolfgang; Polen, Tino; Noack, StephanWild-type C. glutamicum ATCC 13032 is known to possess two enzymes with anaplerotic (C4-directed) carboxylation activity, namely phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCx) and pyruvate carboxylase (PCx). On the other hand, C3-directed decarboxylation can be catalyzed by the three enzymes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCk), oxaloacetate decarboxylase (ODx), and malic enzyme (ME). The resulting high metabolic flexibility at the anaplerotic node compromises the unambigous determination of its carbon and energy flux in C. glutamicum wild type. To circumvent this problem we performed a comprehensive analysis of selected single or double deletion mutants in the anaplerosis of wild-type C. glutamicum under defined d-glucose conditions. By applying well-controlled lab-scale bioreactor experiments in combination with untargeted proteomics, quantitative metabolomics and whole-genome sequencing hitherto unknown, and sometimes counter-intuitive, genotype-phenotype relationships in these mutants could be unraveled. In comparison to the wild type the four mutants C. glutamiucm Δpyc, C. glutamiucm Δpyc Δodx, C. glutamiucm Δppc Δpyc, and C. glutamiucm Δpck showed lowered specific growth rates and d-glucose uptake rates, underlining the importance of PCx and PEPCk activity for a balanced carbon and energy flux at the anaplerotic node. Most interestingly, the strain C. glutamiucm Δppc Δpyc could be evolved to grow on d-glucose as the only source of carbon and energy, whereas this combination was previously considered lethal. The prevented anaplerotic carboxylation activity of PEPCx and PCx was found in the evolved strain to be compensated by an up-regulation of the glyoxylate shunt, potentially in combination with the 2-methylcitrate cycle.Item Open Access CO2 - intrinsic product, essential substrate and regulatory trigger of microbial and mammalian production processes(2015) Blombach, Bastian; Takors, RalfCarbon dioxide formation mirrors the final carbon oxidation steps of aerobic metabolism in microbial and mammalian cells. As a consequence CO2/HCO3- dissociation equilibria arise in fermenters by the growing culture. Anaplerotic reactions make use of the abundant CO2/HCO3- levels for refueling citric acid cycle demands and for enabling oxaloacetate derived products. At the same time CO2 is released manifold in metabolic reactions via decarboxylation activity. The levels of extracellular CO2/HCO3- depend on cellular activities and physical constraints such like hydrostatic pressures, aeration and the efficiency of mixing in large-scale bioreactors. Besides, local CO2/HCO3- levels might also act as metabolic inhibitors or transcriptional effectors triggering regulatory events inside the cells. This review gives an overview about fundamental physicochemical properties of CO2/HCO3- in microbial and mammalian cultures effecting cellular physiology, production processes, metabolic activity and transcriptional regulation.Item Open Access Valorization of pyrolysis water: a biorefinery side stream, for 1,2‑propanediol production with engineered Corynebacterium glutamicum(2017) Lange, Julian; Müller, Felix; Bernecker, Kerstin; Dahmen, Nicolaus; Takors, Ralf; Blombach, BastianItem Open Access Micro‐aerobic production of isobutanol with engineered Pseudomonas putida(2021) Ankenbauer, Andreas; Nitschel, Robert; Teleki, Attila; Müller, Tobias; Favilli, Lorenzo; Blombach, Bastian; Takors, RalfPseudomonas putida KT2440 is emerging as a promising microbial host for biotechnological industry due to its broad range of substrate affinity and resilience to physicochemical stresses. Its natural tolerance towards aromatics and solvents qualifies this versatile microbe as promising candidate to produce next generation biofuels such as isobutanol. In this study, we scaled‐up the production of isobutanol with P. putida from shake flask to fed‐batch cultivation in a 30 L bioreactor. The design of a two‐stage bioprocess with separated growth and production resulted in 3.35 gisobutanol L-1. Flux analysis revealed that the NADPH expensive formation of isobutanol exceeded the cellular catabolic supply of NADPH finally causing growth retardation. Concomitantly, the cell counteracted to the redox imbalance by increased formation of 2‐ketogluconic thereby providing electrons for the respiratory ATP generation. Thus, P. putida partially uncoupled ATP formation from the availability of NADH. The quantitative analysis of intracellular pyridine nucleotides NAD(P)+ and NAD(P)H revealed elevated catabolic and anabolic reducing power during aerobic production of isobutanol. Additionally, the installation of micro‐aerobic conditions during production doubled the integral glucose‐to‐isobutanol conversion yield to 60 mgisobutanol gglucose-1 while preventing undesired carbon loss as 2‐ketogluconic acid.Item Open Access Streamlining the analysis of dynamic 13C-labeling patterns for the metabolic engineering of corynebacterium glutamicum as L-histidine production host(2020) Feith, André; Schwentner, Andreas; Teleki, Attila; Favilli, Lorenzo; Blombach, Bastian; Takors, RalfToday’s possibilities of genome editing easily create plentitudes of strain mutants that need to be experimentally qualified for configuring the next steps of strain engineering. The application of design-build-test-learn cycles requires the identification of distinct metabolic engineering targets as design inputs for subsequent optimization rounds. Here, we present the pool influx kinetics (PIK) approach that identifies promising metabolic engineering targets by pairwise comparison of up- and downstream 13C labeling dynamics with respect to a metabolite of interest. Showcasing the complex l-histidine production with engineered Corynebacterium glutamicum l-histidine-on-glucose yields could be improved to 8.6 ± 0.1 mol% by PIK analysis, starting from a base strain. Amplification of purA, purB, purH, and formyl recycling was identified as key targets only analyzing the signal transduction kinetics mirrored in the PIK values.Item Open Access Deciphering the adaptation of Corynebacterium glutamicum in transition from aerobiosis via microaerobiosis to anaerobiosis(2018) Lange, Julian; Münch, Eugenia; Müller, Jan; Busche, Tobias; Kalinowski, Jörn; Takors, Ralf; Blombach, BastianZero-growth processes are a promising strategy for the production of reduced molecules and depict a steady transition from aerobic to anaerobic conditions. To investigate the adaptation of Corynebacterium glutamicum to altering oxygen availabilities, we conceived a triple-phase fermentation process that describes a gradual reduction of dissolved oxygen with a shift from aerobiosis via microaerobiosis to anaerobiosis. The distinct process phases were clearly bordered by the bacteria’s physiologic response such as reduced growth rate, biomass substrate yield and altered yield of fermentation products. During the process, sequential samples were drawn at six points and analyzed via RNA-sequencing, for metabolite concentrations and for enzyme activities. We found transcriptional alterations of almost 50% (1421 genes) of the entire protein coding genes and observed an upregulation of fermentative pathways, a rearrangement of respiration, and mitigation of the basic cellular mechanisms such as transcription, translation and replication as a transient response related to the installed oxygen dependent process phases. To investigate the regulatory regime, 18 transcriptionally altered (putative) transcriptional regulators were deleted, but none of the deletion strains showed noticeable growth kinetics under an oxygen restricted environment. However, the described transcriptional adaptation of C. glutamicum resolved to varying oxygen availabilities provides a useful basis for future process and strain engineering.