4.5 Article

Optimal energy and redox metabolism in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803

Journal

NPJ SYSTEMS BIOLOGY AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41540-023-00307-3

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Understanding energy and redox homeostasis, as well as carbon partitioning, is crucial for systems metabolic engineering of cell factories. Stoichiometric metabolic modeling and network-wide analysis revealed that the rate of NAD(P)H regeneration controls the ATP/NADPH ratio, and energy and redox balance is interconnected with carbon and nitrogen metabolism. An auxiliary pathway was also identified to support cellular redox homeostasis and ATP cycling.
Understanding energy and redox homeostasis and carbon partitioning is crucial for systems metabolic engineering of cell factories. Carbon metabolism alone cannot achieve maximal accumulation of metabolites in production hosts, since an efficient production of target molecules requires energy and redox balance, in addition to carbon flow. The interplay between cofactor regeneration and heterologous production in photosynthetic microorganisms is not fully explored. To investigate the optimality of energy and redox metabolism, while overproducing alkenes-isobutene, isoprene, ethylene and 1-undecene, in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, we applied stoichiometric metabolic modelling. Our network-wide analysis indicates that the rate of NAD(P)H regeneration, rather than of ATP, controls ATP/NADPH ratio, and thereby bioproduction. The simulation also implies that energy and redox balance is interconnected with carbon and nitrogen metabolism. Furthermore, we show that an auxiliary pathway, composed of serine, one-carbon and glycine metabolism, supports cellular redox homeostasis and ATP cycling. The study revealed non-intuitive metabolic pathways required to enhance alkene production, which are mainly driven by a few key reactions carrying a high flux. We envision that the presented comparative in-silico metabolic analysis will guide the rational design of Synechocystis as a photobiological production platform of target chemicals.

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