Abstract

The synthesis of organic compounds involves the action of multiple enzymes in a biosynthetic pathway. Incorporating such biosynthetic pathways into microbes often leads to substantial cellular and metabolic stress resulting in low titers of the target compound. This limitation can be offset, in part, by optimizing enzyme efficiency and cellular enzyme concentration. The former involves significant efforts to achieve improvements in catalytic efficiency with the caveat that the metabolic load on a microbial cell imposed by the overexpression of the exogenous enzyme could result in reduced cell fitness. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of engineered σ factors to modulate gene expression levels without significant genetic engineering. We note that changing the sequence of two flexible polypeptide loops without any changes to the structural scaffold of the transcription initiation factor σE could modulate the expression levels of the target genes. This ability provides a route to improve the efficiency of a biosynthetic pathway without altering the overall genomic makeup. The σE chimera library thus provides an avenue for pre-determined conditional gene expression of specific genes in Escherichia coli.

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