| Literature DB >> 36067303 |
Rebecca S Sherbo1,2, Pamela A Silver2, Daniel G Nocera1.
Abstract
Microbes can provide a more sustainable and energy-efficient method of food and nutrient production compared to plant and animal sources, but energy-intensive carbon (e.g., sugars) and nitrogen (e.g., ammonia) inputs are required. Gas-fixing microorganisms that can grow on H2 from renewable water splitting and gaseous CO2 and N2 offer a renewable path to overcoming these limitations but confront challenges owing to the scarcity of genetic engineering in such organisms. Here, we demonstrate that the hydrogen-oxidizing carbon- and nitrogen-fixing microorganism Xanthobacter autotrophicus grown on a CO2/N2/H2 gas mixture can overproduce the vitamin riboflavin (vitamin B2). We identify plasmids and promoters for use in this bacterium and employ a constitutive promoter to overexpress riboflavin pathway enzymes. Riboflavin production is quantified at 15 times that of the wild-type organism. We demonstrate that riboflavin overproduction is maintained when the bacterium is grown under hybrid inorganic-biological conditions, in which H2 from water splitting, along with CO2 and N2, is fed to the bacterium, establishing the viability of the approach to sustainably produce food and nutrients.Entities:
Keywords: Xanthobacter; carbon fixation; nitrogen fixation; sustainability; vitamin production
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36067303 PMCID: PMC9477400 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2210538119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779