| Literature DB >> 31750651 |
Adam Meyer1, Ishtiaq Saaem1,2,3, Adam Silverman4, Vanessa A Varaljay5, Rebecca Mickol6, Steven Blum7, Alexander V Tobias8, Nathan D Schwalm8, Wais Mojadedi9, Elizabeth Onderko10, Cassandra Bristol2,3, Shangtao Liu1,2, Katelin Pratt2,3, Arturo Casini2,3, Raissa Eluere2,3, Felix Moser1, Carrie Drake11, Maneesh Gupta5, Nancy Kelley-Loughnane5, Julius P Lucks4, Katherine L Akingbade8, Matthew P Lux7, Sarah Glaven12, Wendy Crookes-Goodson5, Michael C Jewett4, D Benjamin Gordon1,2,3, Christopher A Voigt1,2.
Abstract
Organism engineering requires the selection of an appropriate chassis, editing its genome, combining traits from different source species, and controlling genes with synthetic circuits. When a strain is needed for a new target objective, for example, to produce a chemical-of-need, the best strains, genes, techniques, software, and expertise may be distributed across laboratories. Here, we report a project where we were assigned phloroglucinol (PG) as a target, and then combined unique capabilities across the United States Army, Navy, and Air Force service laboratories with the shared goal of designing an organism to produce this molecule. In addition to the laboratory strain Escherichia coli, organisms were screened from soil and seawater. Putative PG-producing enzymes were mined from a strain bank of bacteria isolated from aircraft and fuel depots. The best enzyme was introduced into the ocean strain Marinobacter atlanticus CP1 with its genome edited to redirect carbon flux from natural fatty acid ester (FAE) production. PG production was also attempted in Bacillus subtilis and Clostridium acetobutylicum. A genetic circuit was constructed in E. coli that responds to PG accumulation, which was then ported to an in vitro paper-based system that could serve as a platform for future low-cost strain screening or for in-field sensing. Collectively, these efforts show how distributed biotechnology laboratories with domain-specific expertise can be marshalled to quickly provide a solution for a targeted organism engineering project, and highlights data and material sharing protocols needed to accelerate future efforts.Entities:
Keywords: TX-TL; Tri-Service; cell-free sensing; enzyme mining; metabolic engineering; military environments; synthetic biology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31750651 DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.9b00393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Synth Biol ISSN: 2161-5063 Impact factor: 5.110