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Engineering cell wall synthesis mechanism for enhanced PHB accumulation in E. coli

  • Xing Chen Zhang
  • , Yingying Guo
  • , Xu Liu
  • , Xin Guang Chen
  • , Qiong Wu
  • , Guo Qiang Chen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Tsinghua University
  • University of Manchester

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The rigidity of bacterial cell walls synthesized by a complicated pathway limit the cell shapes as coccus, bar or ellipse or even fibers. A less rigid bacterium could be beneficial for intracellular accumulation of poly-3-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) as granular inclusion bodies. To understand how cell rigidity affects PHB accumulation, E. coli cell wall synthesis pathway was reinforced and weakened, respectively. Cell rigidity was achieved by thickening the cell walls via insertion of a constitutive gltA (encoding citrate synthase) promoter in front of a series of cell wall synthesis genes on the chromosome of several E. coli derivatives, resulting in 1.32–1.60 folds increase of Young's modulus in mechanical strength for longer E. coli cells over-expressing fission ring FtsZ protein inhibiting gene sulA. Cell rigidity was weakened by down regulating expressions of ten genes in the cell wall synthesis pathway using CRISPRi, leading to elastic cells with more spaces for PHB accumulation. The regulation on cell wall synthesis changes the cell rigidity: E. coli with thickened cell walls accumulated only 25% PHB while cell wall weakened E. coli produced 93% PHB. Manipulation on cell wall synthesis mechanism adds another possibility to morphology engineering of microorganisms.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)32-42
Number of pages11
JournalMetabolic Engineering
Volume45
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bacterial cell wall
  • CRISPRi
  • Cell wall synthesis genes
  • Escherichia coli
  • Inclusion bodies
  • PHB
  • Polyhydroxyalkanoates
  • ftsW
  • murE

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