Pyruvate Carboxylase Variants Enabling Improved Lysine Production from Glucose Identified by Biosensor-Based High-Throughput Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting Screening.
Maike KortmannChristina MackMeike BaumgartMichael BottPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2019)
Pyruvate carboxylase is an anaplerotic carbon dioxide-fixing enzyme replenishing the tricarboxylic acid cycle with oxaloacetate during growth on sugars. In this study, we applied a lysine biosensor to identify pyruvate carboxylase variants in Corynebacterium glutamicum that enable improved l-lysine production from glucose. A suitable reporter strain was transformed with a pyc gene library created by error-prone PCR and screened by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) for cells with increased fluorescence triggered by an elevated cytoplasmic lysine concentration. Two pyruvate carboxylase variants, PCxT343A,I1012S and PCxT132A were identified allowing 9% and 19% increased lysine titers upon plasmid-based expression. Chromosomal expression of PCxT132A and PCxT343A variants led to 6% and 14% higher l-lysine levels. The new PCx variants can be useful also for other microbial strains producing TCA cycle-derived metabolites. Our approach indicates that a biosensor such as pSenLys enables directed evolution of many enzymes involved in converting a carbon source into the target metabolite.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- high throughput
- single cell
- carbon dioxide
- gold nanoparticles
- escherichia coli
- poor prognosis
- sensitive detection
- single molecule
- genome wide
- quantum dots
- cell therapy
- crispr cas
- ms ms
- metabolic syndrome
- dna methylation
- microbial community
- signaling pathway
- insulin resistance
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- cell cycle arrest
- bone marrow
- blood pressure
- cell death
- adipose tissue
- genome wide identification
- pi k akt