Abstract

The bio-economy relies on microbial strains optimized for efficient large scale production of chemicals and fuels from inexpensive and renewable feedstocks under industrial conditions. The reduced one carbon compound methanol, whose production does not involve carbohydrates needed for the feed and food sector, can be used as sole carbon and energy source by methylotrophic bacteria like Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. This strain has already been engineered to produce various commodity and high value chemicals from methanol. The toxic effect of methanol limits its concentration as feedstock to 1% v/v. We obtained M. extorquens chassis strains tolerant to high methanol via adaptive directed evolution using the GM3 technology of automated continuous culture. Turbidostat and conditional medium swap regimes were employed for the parallel evolution of the recently characterized strain TK 0001 and the reference strain AM1 and enabled the isolation of derivatives of both strains capable of stable growth with 10% methanol. The isolates produced more biomass at 1% methanol than the ancestor strains. Genome sequencing identified the gene metY coding for an O-acetyl-L-homoserine sulfhydrylase as common target of mutation. We showed that the wildtype enzyme uses methanol as substrate at elevated concentrations. This side reaction produces methoxine, a toxic homolog of methionine incorporated in polypeptides during translation. All mutated metY alleles isolated from the evolved populations coded for inactive enzymes, designating O-acetyl-L-homoserine sulfhydrylase as a major vector of methanol toxicity. A whole cell transcriptomic analysis revealed that genes coding for chaperones and proteases were upregulated in the evolved cells as compared with the wildtype, suggesting that the cells had to cope with aberrant proteins formed during the adaptation to increasing methanol exposure. In addition, the expression of ribosomal proteins and enzymes related to energy production from methanol like formate dehydrogenases and ATP synthases was boosted in the evolved cells upon a short-term methanol stress. D-lactate production from methanol by adapted cells overexpressing the native D-lactate dehydrogenase was quantified. A significant higher lactate yield was obtained compared with control cells, indicating an enhanced capacity of the cells resistant to high methanol to assimilate this one carbon feedstock more efficiently.

Highlights

  • Methanol is a highly available industrial compound that can be produced from the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide by chemical or electrolytic reduction processes (Ganesh, 2014)

  • Selection of M. extorquens TK 0001 Strains Resistant to High Methanol

  • The adaptation of M. extorquens TK 0001 was initiated with a culture at 1% methanol growing under a turbidostat regime where fastest growing cells are selected by diluting the culture with fresh medium each time a cell density threshold is passed (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Methanol is a highly available industrial compound that can be produced from the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide by chemical or electrolytic reduction processes (Ganesh, 2014). Among methylotrophic organisms capable of growing on methanol as the sole carbon and energy source, the facultative methylotrophic alpha-proteobacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 is widely used as catalyst and has been engineered for the production of a variety of valueadded chemicals or biofuels (Hu and Lidstrom, 2014; Hu et al, 2016; Zhu et al, 2016). With the objective to construct platform strains for the optimal use in biotechnological applications and to answer fundamental questions of evolution, attempts have been made to optimize methanol assimilation through rewiring central steps of formaldehyde conversion (Carroll et al, 2015) or to broaden the set of one carbon (C1) compounds used as substrates (Michener et al, 2014)

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