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Design of stable and self-regulated microbial consortia for chemical synthesis.

Xianglai LiZhao ZhouWenna LiYajun YanXiaolin ShenJia WangXinxiao SunQipeng Yuan
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Microbial coculture engineering has emerged as a promising strategy for biomanufacturing. Stability and self-regulation pose a significant challenge for the generation of intrinsically robust cocultures for large-scale applications. Here, we introduce the use of multi-metabolite cross-feeding (MMCF) to establish a close correlation between the strains and the design rules for selecting the appropriate metabolic branches. This leads to an intrinicially stable two-strain coculture where the population composition and the product titer are insensitive to the initial inoculation ratios. With an intermediate-responsive biosensor, the population of the microbial coculture is autonomously balanced to minimize intermediate accumulation. This static-dynamic strategy is extendable to three-strain cocultures, as demonstrated with de novo biosynthesis of silybin/isosilybin. This strategy is generally applicable, paving the way to the industrial application of microbial cocultures.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • escherichia coli
  • gold nanoparticles
  • transcription factor
  • wastewater treatment
  • quantum dots
  • drug delivery