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Artificial ER-Derived Vesicles as Synthetic Organelles for in Vivo Compartmentalization of Biochemical Pathways.

Mara ReifenrathMislav OrebEckhard BolesJoanna Tripp
Published in: ACS synthetic biology (2020)
Compartmentalization in membrane-surrounded organelles has the potential to overcome obstacles associated with the engineering of metabolic pathways, such as unwanted side reactions, accumulation of toxic intermediates, drain of intermediates out of the cell, and long diffusion distances. Strategies utilizing natural organelles suffer from the presence of endogenous pathways. In our approach, we make use of endoplasmic reticulum-derived vesicles loaded with enzymes of a metabolic pathway ("metabolic vesicles"). They are generated by fusion of synthetic peptides containing the N-terminal proline-rich and self-assembling region of the maize storage protein gamma-Zein ("Zera") to the pathway enzymes. We have applied a strategy to integrate three enzymes of a cis,cis-muconic acid production pathway into those vesicles in yeast. Using fluorescence microscopy and cell fractionation techniques, we have proven the formation of metabolic vesicles and the incorporation of enzymes. Activities of the enzymes and functionality of the compartmentalized pathway were demonstrated in fermentation experiments.
Keyphrases
  • endoplasmic reticulum
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • single molecule
  • stem cells
  • drug delivery
  • climate change
  • amino acid
  • small molecule
  • wound healing
  • human health
  • lactic acid