Abstract

The increasing global population and protein demand cause global challenges for food supply. Fueled by significant developments in synthetic biology, microbial cell factories are constructed for the bioproduction of milk proteins, providing a promising approach for scalable and cost-effective production of alternative proteins. This review focused on the synthetic biology-based microbial cell factory construction for milk protein bioproduction. The composition, content, and functions of major milk proteins were first summarized, especially for caseins, α-lactalbumin, and β-lactoglobulin. An economic analysis was performed to determine whether cell factory-based milk protein production is economically viable for industrial production. Cell factory-based milk protein production is proved to be economically viable for industrial production. However, there still exist some challenges for cell factory-based milk protein biomanufacturing and application, including the inefficient production of milk proteins, insufficient investigation of protein functional property, and insufficient food safety evaluation. Constructing new high-efficiency genetic regulatory elements and genome editing tools, coexpression/overexpression of chaperone genes, and engineering protein secretion pathways and establishing a cost-effective protein purification method are possible ways to improve the production efficiency. Milk protein biomanufacturing is one of the promising approaches to acquiring alternative proteins in the future, which is of great importance for supporting cellular agriculture.

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