Literature DB >> 22629571

The future of metabolic engineering and synthetic biology: towards a systematic practice.

Vikramaditya G Yadav1, Marjan De Mey, Chin Giaw Lim, Parayil Kumaran Ajikumar, Gregory Stephanopoulos.   

Abstract

Industrial biotechnology promises to revolutionize conventional chemical manufacturing in the years ahead, largely owing to the excellent progress in our ability to re-engineer cellular metabolism. However, most successes of metabolic engineering have been confined to over-producing natively synthesized metabolites in E. coli and S. cerevisiae. A major reason for this development has been the descent of metabolic engineering, particularly secondary metabolic engineering, to a collection of demonstrations rather than a systematic practice with generalizable tools. Synthetic biology, a more recent development, faces similar criticisms. Herein, we attempt to lay down a framework around which bioreaction engineering can systematize itself just like chemical reaction engineering. Central to this undertaking is a new approach to engineering secondary metabolism known as 'multivariate modular metabolic engineering' (MMME), whose novelty lies in its assessment and elimination of regulatory and pathway bottlenecks by re-defining the metabolic network as a collection of distinct modules. After introducing the core principles of MMME, we shall then present a number of recent developments in secondary metabolic engineering that could potentially serve as its facilitators. It is hoped that the ever-declining costs of de novo gene synthesis; the improved use of bioinformatic tools to mine, sort and analyze biological data; and the increasing sensitivity and sophistication of investigational tools will make the maturation of microbial metabolic engineering an autocatalytic process. Encouraged by these advances, research groups across the world would take up the challenge of secondary metabolite production in simple hosts with renewed vigor, thereby adding to the range of products synthesized using metabolic engineering.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22629571      PMCID: PMC3615475          DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2012.02.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Metab Eng        ISSN: 1096-7176            Impact factor:   9.783


  49 in total

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Review 6.  Perspectives and limits of engineering the isoprenoid metabolism in heterologous hosts.

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6.  A synthetic biochemistry system for the in vitro production of isoprene from glycolysis intermediates.

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Review 8.  Microbial production of advanced biofuels.

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Review 9.  Understanding and Engineering Distributed Biochemical Pathways in Microbial Communities.

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