Construction of Coculture System Containing Escherichia coli with Different Microbial Species for Biochemical Production.
Runze PanXinyi YangMin QiuWankui JiangWenming ZhangYujia JiangFengxue XinMin JiangPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2023)
Microbial synthesis of target chemicals usually involves multienzymatic reactions in vivo , especially for compounds with a long metabolic pathway. However, when various genes are introduced into one single strain, it leads to a heavy metabolic burden. In contrast, the microbial coculture system can allocate metabolic pathways into different hosts, which will relieve the metabolic burdens. Escherichia coli is the most used chassis to synthesize biofuels and chemicals owing to its well-known genetics, high transformation efficiency, and easy cultivation. Accordingly, cocultures containing the cooperative E. coli with other microbial species have received great attention. In this review, the individual applications and boundedness of different combinations will be summarized. Additionally, the strategies for the self-regulation of population composition, which can help enhance the stability of a coculture system, will also be discussed. Finally, perspectives for the cocultures will be proposed.