4.7 Article

In vitro prototyping of limonene biosynthesis using cell-free protein synthesis

Journal

METABOLIC ENGINEERING
Volume 61, Issue -, Pages 251-260

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2020.05.006

Keywords

Cell-free metabolic engineering; Limonene; iPROBE; Cell-free metabolic pathway prototyping; Cell-free protein synthesis; Synthetic biology

Funding

  1. Department of Energy (BER grant) [DE-SC0018249]
  2. Joint Genome Institute Community Science Program [503280]
  3. David and Lucile Packard Foundation [2011-37152]
  4. Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Program
  5. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  6. Northwestern Molecular Biophysics Training Program - NIH via NIGMS [5T32 GM008382]

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Metabolic engineering of microorganisms to produce sustainable chemicals has emerged as an important part of the global bioeconomy. Unfortunately, efforts to design and engineer microbial cell factories are challenging because design-build-test cycles, iterations of re-engineering organisms to test and optimize new sets of enzymes, are slow. To alleviate this challenge, we demonstrate a cell-free approach termed in vitro Prototyping and Rapid Optimization of Biosynthetic Enzymes (or iPROBE). In iPROBE, a large number of pathway combinations can be rapidly built and optimized. The key idea is to use cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS) to manufacture pathway enzymes in separate reactions that are then mixed to modularly assemble multiple, distinct biosynthetic pathways. As a model, we apply our approach to the 9-step heterologous enzyme pathway to limonene in extracts from Escherichia coli. In iterative cycles of design, we studied the impact of 54 enzyme homologs, multiple enzyme levels, and cofactor concentrations on pathway performance. In total, we screened over 150 unique sets of enzymes in 580 unique pathway conditions to increase limonene production in 24 h from 0.2 to 4.5 mM (23-610 mg/L). Finally, to demonstrate the modularity of this pathway, we also synthesized the biofuel precursors pinene and bisabolene. We anticipate that iPROBE will accelerate design-build-test cycles for metabolic engineering, enabling data-driven multiplexed cell-free methods for testing large combinations of biosynthetic enzymes to inform cellular design.

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