Communities of Niche-optimized Strains (CoNoS) – Design and creation of stable, genome-reduced co-cultures

Simone Schito, Rico Zuchowski, Daniel Bergen, Daniel Strohmeier, Bastian Wollenhaupt, Philipp Menke, Johannes Seiffarth, Katharina Nöh, Dietrich Kohlheyer, Michael Bott, Wolfgang Wiechert, Meike Baumgart, Stephan Noack

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

Current bioprocesses for production of value-added compounds are mainly based on pure cultures that are composed of rationally engineered strains of model organisms with versatile metabolic capacities. However, in the comparably well-defined environment of a bioreactor, metabolic flexibility provided by various highly abundant biosynthetic enzymes is much less required and results in suboptimal use of carbon and energy sources for compound production. In nature, non-model organisms have frequently evolved in communities where genome-reduced, auxotrophic strains cross-feed each other, suggesting that there must be a significant advantage compared to growth without cooperation. To prove this, we started to create and study synthetic communities of niche-optimized strains (CoNoS) that consists of two strains of the same species Corynebacterium glutamicum that are mutually dependent on one amino acid. We used both the wild-type and the genome-reduced C1* chassis for introducing selected amino acid auxotrophies, each based on complete deletion of all required biosynthetic genes. The best candidate strains were used to establish several stably growing CoNoS that were further characterized and optimized by metabolic modelling, microfluidic experiments and rational metabolic engineering to improve amino acid production and exchange. Finally, the engineered CoNoS consisting of an l-leucine and l-arginine auxotroph showed a specific growth rate equivalent to 83% of the wild type in monoculture, making it the fastest co-culture of two auxotrophic C. glutamicum strains to date. Overall, our results are a first promising step towards establishing improved biobased production of value-added compounds using the CoNoS approach.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)91-103
Number of pages13
JournalMetabolic Engineering
Volume73
Early online date25 Jun 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Sept 2022

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