| Literature DB >> 30430405 |
Cara L Sake1, Alexander J Metcalf1, Nanette R Boyle2.
Abstract
Photosynthetic microorganisms have the potential for sustainable production of chemical feedstocks and products but have had limited success due to a lack of tools and deeper understanding of metabolic pathway regulation. The application of instationary metabolic flux analysis (INST-MFA) to photosynthetic microorganisms has allowed researchers to quantify fluxes and identify bottlenecks and metabolic inefficiencies to improve strain performance or gain insight into cellular physiology. Additionally, flux measurements can also highlight deviations between measured and predicted fluxes, revealing weaknesses in metabolic models and highlighting areas where a lack of understanding still exists. In this review, we outline the experimental steps necessary to successfully perform photosynthetic flux experiments and analysis. We also discuss the challenges unique to photosynthetic microorganisms and how to account for them, including: light supply, quenching, concentration, extraction, analysis, and flux calculation. We hope that this will enable a larger number of researchers to successfully apply isotope assisted metabolic flux analysis (13C-MFA) to their favorite photosynthetic organism.Entities:
Keywords: 13C-MFA; Algae; Carbon labeling; Cyanobacteria; INST-MFA; Isotopic labeling; Metabolic engineering; Metabolism; Metabolites; Metabolomics; Photoautotrophic; Quenching
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30430405 PMCID: PMC6313361 DOI: 10.1007/s10529-018-2622-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Lett ISSN: 0141-5492 Impact factor: 2.461
Fig. 1Workflow for the experimental, analytical, and computational aspects of flux measurements in photosynthetic organisms. To study photoautotrophic metabolic fluxes, transient experiments must be performed. After a bolus injection of 13CO2 (or more practically, NaH13CO3), cells must be rapidly sampled, quenched, and extracted. Concentrated metabolite solutions are then analyzed with LC/MS/MS, to produce a time series of mass distributions for each metabolite. This data is then incorporated into the model where adjustable parameters are iteratively changed until the predicted fluxes produce simulated data that minimizes errors when compared to experimental data
Fig. 2Applications of INST-MFA (cases a, b, and c) versus MFA (case c only). a Autotrophic systems. Due to the use of a single-carbon tracer, no unique flux solution can be calculated at isotopic steady state because all metabolites become uniformly labeled. b Slow labeling dynamics. The labeling of some metabolites may be too slow to achieve isotopic steady state within the timeframe that metabolic steady state can be maintained. Note that the fluxes (arrows) change before the labeling has fully equilibrated. c Rapid isotopic steady state. Although stationary MFA can be used to determine fluxes, INST-MFA can be used in some situations to improve estimates of exchange fluxes and pool sizes if rapid sampling is available. Arrows represent fluxes and tanks represent pool sizes at each time point. Figure used with permission from (Cheah and Young 2018a)
Selected examples of experimental protocols for flux measurements in photosynthetic organisms
| Organism | Concentrating method (C) | Quenching method (Q) | Extraction method (E) | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eukaryote |
| Filtration | − 70 °C MeOH | 40:40:20 CH3CN:MeOH:H2O | C | (Wu et al. |
| Q | ||||||
| E | (Bennett et al. | |||||
|
| Centrifugation | − 70 °C MeOH | Mechanical cell disruption with − 70 °C MeOH | C | (Boyle et al. | |
| Q | ||||||
| E | ||||||
|
| Centrifugation | Liquid nitrogen | Lyophilization followed by hydrolysis with HCl | C | (Zheng | |
| Q | ||||||
| E | ||||||
| Prokaryote | Centrifugation | − 40 °C 60% MeOH | 50% MeOH | C | (Young et al. Young et al. | |
| Q | ||||||
| E | ||||||
| Centrifugation | 0 °C PBS | 8:4:3 CHCl3:MeOH:H2O | C | (Jazmin et al. | ||
| Q | ||||||
| E | (Folch et al. | |||||
| Centrifugation | − 5 °C minimal BG-11 medium | CHCl3:MeOH | C | (Abernathy et al. | ||
| Q | ||||||
| E | (Ma et al. | |||||
| Centrifugation | − 20 °C 30% MeOH | − 20 °C 80% MeOH | C | (Qian et al. | ||
| Q | ||||||
| E | ||||||
| Centrifugation | − 20 °C 60% MeOH | − 20 °C 80% MeOH | C | (Qian et al. | ||
| Q | ||||||
| E | (Bennette et al. | |||||
| Filtration | − 20 °C 80% MeOH | − 20 °C 80% MeOH | C | (Bennette et al. | ||
| Q | ||||||
| E | ||||||
MeOH Methanol, PBS phosphate buffered saline
*Heterotrophic experiment