Literature DB >> 22188344

A systems-level approach for metabolic engineering of yeast cell factories.

Il-Kwon Kim1, António Roldão, Verena Siewers, Jens Nielsen.   

Abstract

The generation of novel yeast cell factories for production of high-value industrial biotechnological products relies on three metabolic engineering principles: design, construction, and analysis. In the last two decades, strong efforts have been put on developing faster and more efficient strategies and/or technologies for each one of these principles. For design and construction, three major strategies are described in this review: (1) rational metabolic engineering; (2) inverse metabolic engineering; and (3) evolutionary strategies. Independent of the selected strategy, the process of designing yeast strains involves five decision points: (1) choice of product, (2) choice of chassis, (3) identification of target genes, (4) regulating the expression level of target genes, and (5) network balancing of the target genes. At the construction level, several molecular biology tools have been developed through the concept of synthetic biology and applied for the generation of novel, engineered yeast strains. For comprehensive and quantitative analysis of constructed strains, systems biology tools are commonly used and using a multi-omics approach. Key information about the biological system can be revealed, for example, identification of genetic regulatory mechanisms and competitive pathways, thereby assisting the in silico design of metabolic engineering strategies for improving strain performance. Examples on how systems and synthetic biology brought yeast metabolic engineering closer to industrial biotechnology are described in this review, and these examples should demonstrate the potential of a systems-level approach for fast and efficient generation of yeast cell factories.
© 2011 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22188344     DOI: 10.1111/j.1567-1364.2011.00779.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FEMS Yeast Res        ISSN: 1567-1356            Impact factor:   2.796


  30 in total

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Review 2.  Metabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a key cell factory platform for future biorefineries.

Authors:  Kuk-Ki Hong; Jens Nielsen
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2012-03-03       Impact factor: 9.261

Review 3.  Protein folding and secretion: mechanistic insights advancing recombinant protein production in S. cerevisiae.

Authors:  Carissa L Young; Anne S Robinson
Journal:  Curr Opin Biotechnol       Date:  2014-07-15       Impact factor: 9.740

4.  A system for multilocus chromosomal integration and transformation-free selection marker rescue.

Authors:  Michael S Siddiqui; Atri Choksi; Christina D Smolke
Journal:  FEMS Yeast Res       Date:  2014-10-10       Impact factor: 2.796

Review 5.  Consolidated Bioprocessing: Synthetic Biology Routes to Fuels and Fine Chemicals.

Authors:  Alec Banner; Helen S Toogood; Nigel S Scrutton
Journal:  Microorganisms       Date:  2021-05-18

6.  Benchmarking two commonly used Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains for heterologous vanillin-β-glucoside production.

Authors:  Tomas Strucko; Olivera Magdenoska; Uffe H Mortensen
Journal:  Metab Eng Commun       Date:  2015-09-11

7.  Stress tolerance enhancement via SPT15 base editing in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Yuping Lin; Yanfang Liu; Yufeng Guo; Fengli Wu; Yuanyuan Zhang; Xianni Qi; Zhen Wang; Qinhong Wang
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2021-07-06       Impact factor: 6.040

8.  De novo production of the flavonoid naringenin in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Frank Koopman; Jules Beekwilder; Barbara Crimi; Adele van Houwelingen; Robert D Hall; Dirk Bosch; Antonius J A van Maris; Jack T Pronk; Jean-Marc Daran
Journal:  Microb Cell Fact       Date:  2012-12-08       Impact factor: 5.328

9.  Mapping condition-dependent regulation of metabolism in yeast through genome-scale modeling.

Authors:  Tobias Österlund; Intawat Nookaew; Sergio Bordel; Jens Nielsen
Journal:  BMC Syst Biol       Date:  2013-04-30

10.  Comparative multi-goal tradeoffs in systems engineering of microbial metabolism.

Authors:  David Byrne; Alexandra Dumitriu; Daniel Segrè
Journal:  BMC Syst Biol       Date:  2012-09-26
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