Archimedes' principle for characterisation of recombinant whole cell biocatalysts.
Steven SchmittMarcel WalserMichael RehmannSabine OesterleSven PankeMartin HeldPublished in: Scientific reports (2018)
The ability of whole cells to catalyse multistep reactions, often yielding synthetically demanding compounds later used by industrial biotech or pharma, makes them an indispensable tool of synthetic chemistry. The complex reaction network employed by cellular catalysts and the still only moderate predictive power of modelling approaches leaves this tool challenging to engineer. Frequently, large libraries of semi-rationally generated variants are sampled in high-throughput mode in order to then identify improved catalysts. We present a method for space- and time-efficient processing of very large libraries (107) of recombinant cellular catalysts, in which the phenotypic characterisation and the isolation of positive variants for the entire library is done within one minute in a single, highly parallelized operation. Specifically, product formation in nanolitre-sized cultivation vessels is sensed and translated into the formation of catalase as a reporter protein. Exposure to hydrogen peroxide leads to oxygen gas formation and thus to a density shift of the cultivation vessel. Exploiting Archimedes' principle, this density shift and the resulting upward buoyancy force can be used for batch-wise library sampling. We demonstrate the potential of the method for both, screening and selection protocols, and envision a wide applicability of the system for biosensor-based assays.
Keyphrases
- hydrogen peroxide
- high throughput
- highly efficient
- single cell
- copy number
- induced apoptosis
- transition metal
- nitric oxide
- metal organic framework
- heavy metals
- crispr cas
- wastewater treatment
- gold nanoparticles
- cell cycle arrest
- sensitive detection
- high intensity
- cell free
- stem cells
- cell death
- mesenchymal stem cells
- signaling pathway
- gene expression