ChemE Colloquium - Jose L. Avalos
Tuesday,
November 20, 2018
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Spatial and dynamic control of engineered metabolism using subcellular engineering and optogenetics
Spatial and dynamic control of engineered metabolism using subcellular engineering and
optogenetics
José L. Avalos. Ph.D. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, and the Andlinger
Center for Energy and the Environment. Princeton University
Abstract
Subcellular localization and dynamic control of metabolic pathways have received much attention in metabolic engineering in recent years. Each subcellular compartment in yeast offers a unique physicochemical environment as well as distinct metabolite, enzyme, and cofactor compositions, which may benefit the activity of metabolic pathways. Furthermore, the spatial separation of organelles from cytosol offers unique opportunities to reduce the toxicity of intermediates, eliminate metabolic crosstalk, and enhance the efficiency of compartmentalized pathways. In the first part of my talk I will show how interesting and unexpected behaviors arise when organelles are involved in metabolic pathways, and present new data on how compartmentalizing the Ehrlich pathway in yeast mitochondria boosts isobutanol production.
In the second part of my talk I will show how optogenetics can be applied to metabolic engineering. Metabolic pathway optimization requires fine-tuning the timing and levels of expression of metabolic enzymes. Optogenetic controls are ideal for this, as light can be applied and removed instantly without complex media changes. I will present a new technological platform that utilizes a light-sensitive transcription factor to achieve unprecedented control over engineered metabolic pathways in yeast. Using this technology, we achieve robust and homogeneous transcriptional control at cell densities as high as 50 OD600 in 5L bioreactors. I will show how optogenetics enables a new mode of bioreactor operation, in which periodic light pulses are used to tune the levels and timing of enzyme expression during the fermentation to boost yields.
Combining mitochondrial engineering with dynamic regulation of metabolic pathways allows us to produce up to 8.49 ± 0.31 g/L of isobutanol and 2.38 ± 0.06 g/L of 2-methyl-1-butanol microaerobically from glucose in lab-scale bioreactors, which is more than a 10-fold improvement over strains lacking optogenetic controls. These results make a compelling case for the application of subcellular engineering and optogenetics to metabolic engineering to develop not only new strategies for metabolic pathway optimization, but also new capabilities for operating, optimizing, and automating bioreactors.
Spatial and dynamic control of engineered metabolism using subcellular engineering and
optogenetics
José L. Avalos. Ph.D. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, and the Andlinger
Center for Energy and the Environment. Princeton University
Abstract
Subcellular localization and dynamic control of metabolic pathways have received much attention in metabolic engineering in recent years. Each subcellular compartment in yeast offers a unique physicochemical environment as well as distinct metabolite, enzyme, and cofactor compositions, which may benefit the activity of metabolic pathways. Furthermore, the spatial separation of organelles from cytosol offers unique opportunities to reduce the toxicity of intermediates, eliminate metabolic crosstalk, and enhance the efficiency of compartmentalized pathways. In the first part of my talk I will show how interesting and unexpected behaviors arise when organelles are involved in metabolic pathways, and present new data on how compartmentalizing the Ehrlich pathway in yeast mitochondria boosts isobutanol production.
In the second part of my talk I will show how optogenetics can be applied to metabolic engineering. Metabolic pathway optimization requires fine-tuning the timing and levels of expression of metabolic enzymes. Optogenetic controls are ideal for this, as light can be applied and removed instantly without complex media changes. I will present a new technological platform that utilizes a light-sensitive transcription factor to achieve unprecedented control over engineered metabolic pathways in yeast. Using this technology, we achieve robust and homogeneous transcriptional control at cell densities as high as 50 OD600 in 5L bioreactors. I will show how optogenetics enables a new mode of bioreactor operation, in which periodic light pulses are used to tune the levels and timing of enzyme expression during the fermentation to boost yields.
Combining mitochondrial engineering with dynamic regulation of metabolic pathways allows us to produce up to 8.49 ± 0.31 g/L of isobutanol and 2.38 ± 0.06 g/L of 2-methyl-1-butanol microaerobically from glucose in lab-scale bioreactors, which is more than a 10-fold improvement over strains lacking optogenetic controls. These results make a compelling case for the application of subcellular engineering and optogenetics to metabolic engineering to develop not only new strategies for metabolic pathway optimization, but also new capabilities for operating, optimizing, and automating bioreactors.
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