Abstract

SummaryIn contrast to the current paradigm of using microbial mono‐cultures in most biotechnological applications, increasing efforts are being directed towards engineering mixed‐species consortia to perform functions that are difficult to programme into individual strains. In this work, we developed a synthetic microbial consortium composed of two genetically engineered microbes, a cyanobacterium (Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942) and a heterotrophic bacterium (Pseudomonas putida EM173). These microbial species specialize in the co‐culture: cyanobacteria fix CO2 through photosynthetic metabolism and secrete sufficient carbohydrates to support the growth and active metabolism of P. putida, which has been engineered to consume sucrose and to degrade the environmental pollutant 2,4‐dinitrotoluene (2,4‐DNT). By encapsulating S. elongatus within a barium–alginate hydrogel, cyanobacterial cells were protected from the toxic effects of 2,4‐DNT, enhancing the performance of the co‐culture. The synthetic consortium was able to convert 2,4‐DNT with light and CO2 as key inputs, and its catalytic performance was stable over time. Furthermore, cycling this synthetic consortium through low nitrogen medium promoted the sucrose‐dependent accumulation of polyhydroxyalkanoate, an added‐value biopolymer, in the engineered P. putida strain. Altogether, the synthetic consortium displayed the capacity to remediate the industrial pollutant 2,4‐DNT while simultaneously synthesizing biopolymers using light and CO2 as the primary inputs.

Highlights

  • In nature, bacteria typically coexist in communities with hundreds to thousands of species, creating a complex web of interspecies metabolic reactions (Little et al, 2008; Saxena, 2015; Dolinsek et al, 2016; Goldford et al, 2018)

  • By encapsulating S. elongatus within a barium–alginate hydrogel, cyanobacterial cells were protected from the toxic effects of 2,4-DNT, enhancing the performance of the co-culture

  • Microbial Biotechnology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd and Society for Applied Microbiology., Microbial Biotechnology, 13, 997–1011

Read more

Summary

Summary

In contrast to the current paradigm of using microbial mono-cultures in most biotechnological applications, increasing efforts are being directed towards engineering mixed-species consortia to perform functions that are difficult to programme into individual strains. We developed a synthetic microbial consortium composed of two genetically engineered microbes, a cyanobacterium (Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942) and a heterotrophic bacterium (Pseudomonas putida EM173). These microbial species specialize in the co-culture: cyanobacteria fix CO2 through photosynthetic metabolism and secrete. The synthetic consortium was able to convert 2,4-DNT with light and CO2 as key inputs, and its catalytic performance was stable over time. Cycling this synthetic consortium through low nitrogen medium promoted the sucrosedependent accumulation of polyhydroxyalkanoate, an added-value biopolymer, in the engineered P. putida strain. The synthetic consortium displayed the capacity to remediate the industrial pollutant 2,4DNT while simultaneously synthesizing biopolymers using light and CO2 as the primary inputs

Introduction
Results
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Analytical methods
Conflict of interest
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call