Yang-Yang Fan, Qiang Tang, Yang Li, Hong Sun, Meiying Xu, Han-Qing Yu
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Fabricating an advanced electrogenic chassis by activating microbial metabolism and fine-tuning extracellular electron transfer.
Exploiting electrogenic microorganisms as unconventional chassis hosts offers potential solutions to global energy and environmental challenges. However, their limited electrogenic efficiency and metabolic versatility, due to genetic and metabolic constraints, hinder broader applications. Herein, we developed a multifaceted approach to fabricate an enhanced electrogenic chassis, starting with streamlining the genome by removing extrachromosomal genetic material. This reduction led to faster lactate consumption, higher intracellular NADH/NAD+ and ATP/ADP levels, and increased growth and biomass accumulation, as well as promoted electrogenic activity. Transcriptome profiling showed an overall activation of cellular metabolism. We further established a molecular toolkit with a vector vehicle incorporating native replication block and refined promoter components for precise gene expression control. This enabled engineered primary metabolism for greater environmental robustness and fine-tuned extracellular electron transfer (EET) for improved efficiency. The enhanced chassis demonstrated substantially improved pollutant biodegradation and radionuclide removal, establishing a new paradigm for utilizing electrogenic organisms as novel biotechnology chassis.
期刊介绍:
Trends in Biotechnology publishes reviews and perspectives on the applied biological sciences, focusing on useful science applied to, derived from, or inspired by living systems.
The major themes that TIBTECH is interested in include:
Bioprocessing (biochemical engineering, applied enzymology, industrial biotechnology, biofuels, metabolic engineering)
Omics (genome editing, single-cell technologies, bioinformatics, synthetic biology)
Materials and devices (bionanotechnology, biomaterials, diagnostics/imaging/detection, soft robotics, biosensors/bioelectronics)
Therapeutics (biofabrication, stem cells, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, antibodies and other protein drugs, drug delivery)
Agroenvironment (environmental engineering, bioremediation, genetically modified crops, sustainable development).