scholarly journals Analysis of metabolic network disruption in engineered microbial hosts due to enzyme promiscuity

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. e00170
Author(s):  
Vladimir Porokhin ◽  
Sara A. Amin ◽  
Trevor B. Nicks ◽  
Venkatesh Endalur Gopinarayanan ◽  
Nikhil U. Nair ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Porokhin ◽  
Sara A. Amin ◽  
Trevor B. Nicks ◽  
Venkatesh Endalur Gopinarayanan ◽  
Nikhil U. Nair ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundIncreasing understanding of metabolic and regulatory networks underlying microbial physiology has enabled creation of progressively more complex synthetic biological systems for biochemical, biomedical, agricultural, and environmental applications. However, despite best efforts, confounding phenotypes still emerge from unforeseen interplay between biological parts, and the design of robust and modular biological systems remains elusive. Such interactions are difficult to predict when designing synthetic systems and may manifest during experimental testing as inefficiencies that need to be overcome. Despite advances in tools and methodologies for strain engineering, there remains a lack of tools that can systematically identify incompatibilities between the native metabolism of the host and its engineered modifications.ResultsTransforming organisms such as Escherichia coli into microbial factories is achieved via a number of engineering strategies, used individually or in combination, with the goal of maximizing the production of chosen target compounds. One technique relies on suppressing or overexpressing selected genes; another involves on introducing heterologous enzymes into a microbial host. These modifications steer mass flux towards the set of desired metabolites but may create unexpected interactions. In this work, we develop a computational method, termed Metabolic Disruption Workflow (MDFlow), for discovering interactions and network disruption arising from enzyme promiscuity – the ability of enzymes to act on a wide range of molecules that are structurally similar to their native substrates. We apply MDFlow to two experimentally verified cases where strains with essential genes knocked out are rescued by interactions resulting from overexpression of one or more other genes. We then apply MDFlow to predict and evaluate a number of putative promiscuous reactions that can interfere with two heterologous pathways designed for 3-hydroxypropic acid (3-HP) production.ConclusionsUsing MDFlow, we can identify putative enzyme promiscuity and the subsequent formation of unintended and undesirable byproducts that are not only disruptive to the host metabolism but also to the intended end-objective of high biosynthetic productivity and yield. In addition, we show how enzyme promiscuity can potentially be responsible for the adaptability of cells to the disruption of essential pathways in terms of biomass growth.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 400-410
Author(s):  
Valentina De Luca ◽  
Luigi Mandrich

: Enzymes are among the most studied biological molecules because better understanding enzymes structure and activity will shed more light on their biological processes and regulation; from a biotechnological point of view there are many examples of enzymes used with the aim to obtain new products and/or to make industrial processes less invasive towards the environment. Enzymes are known for their high specificity in the recognition of a substrate but considering the particular features of an increasing number of enzymes this is not completely true, in fact, many enzymes are active on different substrates: this ability is called enzyme promiscuity. Usually, promiscuous activities have significantly lower kinetic parameters than to that of primary activity, but they have a crucial role in gene evolution. It is accepted that gene duplication followed by sequence divergence is considered a key evolutionary mechanism to generate new enzyme functions. In this way, promiscuous activities are the starting point to increase a secondary activity in the main activity and then get a new enzyme. The primary activity can be lost or reduced to a promiscuous activity. In this review we describe the differences between substrate and enzyme promiscuity, and its rule in gene evolution. From a practical point of view the knowledge of promiscuity can facilitate the in vitro progress of proteins engineering, both for biomedical and industrial applications. In particular, we report cases regarding esterases, phosphotriesterases and cytochrome P450.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (27) ◽  
pp. 1950331
Author(s):  
Shiguo Deng ◽  
Henggang Ren ◽  
Tongfeng Weng ◽  
Changgui Gu ◽  
Huijie Yang

Evolutionary processes of many complex networks in reality are dominated by duplication and divergence. This mechanism leads to redundant structures, i.e. some nodes share most of their neighbors and some local patterns are similar, called redundancy of network. An interesting reverse problem is to discover evolutionary information from the present topological structure. We propose a quantitative measure of redundancy of network from the perspective of principal component analysis. The redundancy of a community in the empirical human metabolic network is negatively and closely related with its evolutionary age, which is consistent with that for the communities in the modeling protein–protein network. This behavior can be used to find the evolutionary difference stored in cellular networks.


2007 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenqi Lu ◽  
Ze Zhang ◽  
Lindsey Leach ◽  
MJ Kearsey ◽  
ZW Luo

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document