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Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design

The necessity to decrease our fossil energy dependence requests bioprocesses based on biomass degradation. Cellobiose is the main product released by cellulases when acting on the major plant cell wall polysaccharide constituent, the cellulose. Escherichia coli, one of the most common model organism...

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Autores principales: Borne, Romain, Vita, Nicolas, Franche, Nathalie, Tardif, Chantal, Perret, Stéphanie, Fierobe, Henri-Pierre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7797564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33457204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mec.2020.e00157
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author Borne, Romain
Vita, Nicolas
Franche, Nathalie
Tardif, Chantal
Perret, Stéphanie
Fierobe, Henri-Pierre
author_facet Borne, Romain
Vita, Nicolas
Franche, Nathalie
Tardif, Chantal
Perret, Stéphanie
Fierobe, Henri-Pierre
author_sort Borne, Romain
collection PubMed
description The necessity to decrease our fossil energy dependence requests bioprocesses based on biomass degradation. Cellobiose is the main product released by cellulases when acting on the major plant cell wall polysaccharide constituent, the cellulose. Escherichia coli, one of the most common model organisms for the academy and the industry, is unable to metabolize this disaccharide. In this context, the remodeling of E. coli to catabolize cellobiose should thus constitute an important progress for the design of such applications. Here, we developed a robust E. coli strain able to metabolize cellobiose by integration of a small set of modifications in its genome. Contrary to previous studies that use adaptative evolution to achieve some growth on this sugar by reactivating E. coli cryptic operons coding for cellobiose metabolism, we identified easily insertable modifications impacting the cellobiose import (expression of a gene coding a truncated variant of the maltoporin LamB, modification of the expression of lacY encoding the lactose permease) and its intracellular degradation (genomic insertion of a gene encoding either a cytosolic β-glucosidase or a cellobiose phosphorylase). Taken together, our results provide an easily transferable set of mutations that confers to E. coli an efficient growth phenotype on cellobiose (doubling time of 2.2 ​h in aerobiosis) without any prior adaptation.
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spelling pubmed-77975642021-01-15 Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design Borne, Romain Vita, Nicolas Franche, Nathalie Tardif, Chantal Perret, Stéphanie Fierobe, Henri-Pierre Metab Eng Commun Full Length Article The necessity to decrease our fossil energy dependence requests bioprocesses based on biomass degradation. Cellobiose is the main product released by cellulases when acting on the major plant cell wall polysaccharide constituent, the cellulose. Escherichia coli, one of the most common model organisms for the academy and the industry, is unable to metabolize this disaccharide. In this context, the remodeling of E. coli to catabolize cellobiose should thus constitute an important progress for the design of such applications. Here, we developed a robust E. coli strain able to metabolize cellobiose by integration of a small set of modifications in its genome. Contrary to previous studies that use adaptative evolution to achieve some growth on this sugar by reactivating E. coli cryptic operons coding for cellobiose metabolism, we identified easily insertable modifications impacting the cellobiose import (expression of a gene coding a truncated variant of the maltoporin LamB, modification of the expression of lacY encoding the lactose permease) and its intracellular degradation (genomic insertion of a gene encoding either a cytosolic β-glucosidase or a cellobiose phosphorylase). Taken together, our results provide an easily transferable set of mutations that confers to E. coli an efficient growth phenotype on cellobiose (doubling time of 2.2 ​h in aerobiosis) without any prior adaptation. Elsevier 2020-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7797564/ /pubmed/33457204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mec.2020.e00157 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full Length Article
Borne, Romain
Vita, Nicolas
Franche, Nathalie
Tardif, Chantal
Perret, Stéphanie
Fierobe, Henri-Pierre
Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
title Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
title_full Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
title_fullStr Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
title_full_unstemmed Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
title_short Engineering of a new Escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
title_sort engineering of a new escherichia coli strain efficiently metabolizing cellobiose with promising perspectives for plant biomass-based application design
topic Full Length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7797564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33457204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mec.2020.e00157
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