CRISPRi-mediated metabolic engineering of E. coli for O-methylated anthocyanin production.
Brady F CressQuentin D LeitzDaniel C KimTeresita D AmoreJon Y SuzukiRobert J LinhardtMattheos A G KoffasPublished in: Microbial cell factories (2017)
An E. coli strain was engineered for production of the specialty anthocyanin P3G using the abundant and comparatively inexpensive flavonol precursor, (+)-catechin. Furthermore, dCas9-mediated transcriptional repression of metJ alleviated a limiting SAM pool size, enhancing titers of the methylated anthocyanin product. While microbial production of P3G and other O-methylated anthocyanin pigments will likely be valuable to the food industry as natural food and beverage colorants, we expect that the strain constructed here will also prove useful to the ornamental plant industry as a platform for evaluating putative anthocyanin O-methyltransferases in pursuit of bespoke flower pigment compositions.