scholarly journals Metabolic engineering design to enhance (R,R)-2,3-butanediol production from glycerol in Bacillus subtilis based on flux balance analysis

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nunthaphan Vikromvarasiri ◽  
Tomokazu Shirai ◽  
Akihiko Kondo

Abstract Background Glycerol is a desirable alternative substrate for 2,3-butanediol (2,3-BD) production for sustainable development in biotechnological industries and non-food competitive feedstock. B. subtilis, a “generally recognized as safe” organism that is highly tolerant to fermentation products, is an ideal platform microorganism to engineer the pathways for the production of valuable bio-based chemicals, but it has never been engineered to improve 2,3-BD production from glycerol. In this study, we aimed to enhance 2,3-BD production from glycerol in B. subtilis through in silico analysis. Genome-scale metabolic model (GSM) simulations was used to design and develop the metabolic pathways of B. subtilis. Flux balance analysis (FBA) simulation was used to evaluate the effects of step-by-step gene knockouts to improve 2,3-BD production from glycerol in B. subtilis. Results B. subtilis was bioengineered to enhance 2,3-BD production from glycerol using FBA in a published GSM model of B. subtilis, iYO844. Four genes, ackA, pta, lctE, and mmgA, were knocked out step by step, and the effects thereof on 2,3-BD production were evaluated. While knockout of ackA and pta had no effect on 2,3-BD production, lctE knockout led to a substantial increase in 2,3-BD production. Moreover, 2,3-BD production was improved by mmgA knockout, which had never been investigated. In addition, comparisons between in silico simulations and fermentation profiles of all B. subtilis strains are presented in this study. Conclusions The strategy developed in this study, using in silico FBA combined with experimental validation, can be used to optimize metabolic pathways for enhanced 2,3-BD production from glycerol. It is expected to provide a novel platform for the bioengineering of strains to enhance the bioconversion of glycerol into other highly valuable chemical products.

2009 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. S166
Author(s):  
Chikara Furusawa ◽  
Yohei Shinfuku ◽  
Natee Sorpitiporn ◽  
Masahiro Sono ◽  
Takashi Hirasawa ◽  
...  

Microbiome ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack Jansma ◽  
Sahar El Aidy

AbstractThe human gut harbors an enormous number of symbiotic microbes, which is vital for human health. However, interactions within the complex microbiota community and between the microbiota and its host are challenging to elucidate, limiting development in the treatment for a variety of diseases associated with microbiota dysbiosis. Using in silico simulation methods based on flux balance analysis, those interactions can be better investigated. Flux balance analysis uses an annotated genome-scale reconstruction of a metabolic network to determine the distribution of metabolic fluxes that represent the complete metabolism of a bacterium in a certain metabolic environment such as the gut. Simulation of a set of bacterial species in a shared metabolic environment can enable the study of the effect of numerous perturbations, such as dietary changes or addition of a probiotic species in a personalized manner. This review aims to introduce to experimental biologists the possible applications of flux balance analysis in the host-microbiota interaction field and discusses its potential use to improve human health.


2010 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 1225-1229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evangelos Simeonidis ◽  
Ettore Murabito ◽  
Kieran Smallbone ◽  
Hans V. Westerhoff

Advances in biological techniques have led to the availability of genome-scale metabolic reconstructions for yeast. The size and complexity of such networks impose limits on what types of analyses one can perform. Constraint-based modelling overcomes some of these restrictions by using physicochemical constraints to describe the potential behaviour of an organism. FBA (flux balance analysis) highlights flux patterns through a network that serves to achieve a particular objective and requires a minimal amount of data to make quantitative inferences about network behaviour. Even though FBA is a powerful tool for system predictions, its general formulation sometimes results in unrealistic flux patterns. A typical example is fermentation in yeast: ethanol is produced during aerobic growth in excess glucose, but this pattern is not present in a typical FBA solution. In the present paper, we examine the issue of yeast fermentation against respiration during growth. We have studied a number of hypotheses from the modelling perspective, and novel formulations of the FBA approach have been tested. By making the observation that more respiration requires the synthesis of more mitochondria, an energy cost related to mitochondrial synthesis is added to the FBA formulation. Results, although still approximate, are closer to experimental observations than earlier FBA analyses, at least on the issue of fermentation.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javad Zamani ◽  
Sayed-Amir Marashi ◽  
Tahmineh Lohrasebi ◽  
Mohammad-Ali Malboobi ◽  
Esmail Foroozan

Genome-scale metabolic models (GSMMs) have enabled researchers to perform systems-level studies of living organisms. As a constraint-based technique, flux balance analysis (FBA) aids computation of reaction fluxes and prediction of...


Author(s):  
Yee Wen Choon ◽  
Mohd Saberi Bin Mohamad ◽  
Safaai Deris ◽  
Rosli Md. Illias ◽  
Lian En Chai ◽  
...  

Cells ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 2097
Author(s):  
Supatcha Lertampaiporn ◽  
Jittisak Senachak ◽  
Wassana Taenkaew ◽  
Chiraphan Khannapho ◽  
Apiradee Hongsthong

This study used an in silico metabolic engineering strategy for modifying the metabolic capabilities of Spirulina under specific conditions as an approach to modifying culture conditions in order to generate the intended outputs. In metabolic models, the basic metabolic fluxes in steady-state metabolic networks have generally been controlled by stoichiometric reactions; however, this approach does not consider the regulatory mechanism of the proteins responsible for the metabolic reactions. The protein regulatory network plays a critical role in the response to stresses, including environmental stress, encountered by an organism. Thus, the integration of the response mechanism of Spirulina to growth temperature stresses was investigated via simulation of a proteome-based GSMM, in which the boundaries were established by using protein expression levels obtained from quantitative proteomic analysis. The proteome-based flux balance analysis (FBA) under an optimal growth temperature (35 °C), a low growth temperature (22 °C) and a high growth temperature (40 °C) showed biomass yields that closely fit the experimental data obtained in previous research. Moreover, the response mechanism was analyzed by the integration of the proteome and protein–protein interaction (PPI) network, and those data were used to support in silico knockout/overexpression of selected proteins involved in the PPI network. The Spirulina, wild-type, proteome fluxes under different growth temperatures and those of mutants were compared, and the proteins/enzymes catalyzing the different flux levels were mapped onto their designated pathways for biological interpretation.


mBio ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanfen Fu ◽  
Lian He ◽  
Jennifer Reeve ◽  
David A. C. Beck ◽  
Mary E. Lidstrom

ABSTRACT Methylomicrobium buryatense 5GB1 is an obligate methylotroph which grows on methane or methanol with similar growth rates. It has long been assumed that the core metabolic pathways must be similar on the two substrates, but recent studies of methane metabolism in this bacterium suggest that growth on methanol might have significant differences from growth on methane. In this study, both a targeted metabolomics approach and a 13C tracer approach were taken to understand core carbon metabolism in M. buryatense 5GB1 during growth on methanol and to determine whether such differences occur. Our results suggest a systematic shift of active core metabolism in which increased flux occurred through both the Entner-Doudoroff (ED) pathway and the partial serine cycle, while the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle was incomplete, in contrast to growth on methane. Using the experimental results as constraints, we applied flux balance analysis to determine the metabolic flux phenotype of M. buryatense 5GB1 growing on methanol, and the results are consistent with predictions based on ATP and NADH changes. Transcriptomics analysis suggested that the changes in fluxes and metabolite levels represented results of posttranscriptional regulation. The combination of flux balance analysis of the genome-scale model and the flux ratio from 13C data changed the solution space for a better prediction of cell behavior and demonstrated the significant differences in physiology between growth on methane and growth on methanol. IMPORTANCE One-carbon compounds such as methane and methanol are of increasing interest as sustainable substrates for biological production of fuels and industrial chemicals. The bacteria that carry out these conversions have been studied for many decades, but gaps exist in our knowledge of their metabolic pathways. One such gap is the difference between growth on methane and growth on methanol. Understanding such metabolism is important, since each has advantages and disadvantages as a feedstock for production of chemicals and fuels. The significance of our research is in the demonstration that the metabolic network is substantially altered in each case and in the delineation of these changes. The resulting new insights into the core metabolism of this bacterium now provide an improved basis for future strain design.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document