Abstract

BackgroundMicrobial tolerance to different environmental stresses is of importance for efficient production of biofuels and biochemical. Such traits are often improved by evolutionary engineering approaches including mutagen-induced mutagenesis and successive passage. In contrast to these approaches which generate mutations in rapidly growing cells, recent research showed that mutations could be generated in non-dividing cells under stressful but non-lethal conditions, leading to the birth of the theory of stress-induced mutagenesis (SIM). A molecular mechanism of SIM has been elucidated to be mutagenic repair of DNA breaks. This inspired us to develop a synthetic SIM module to simulate the mutagenic cellular response so as to accelerate microbial adaptive evolution for an improved stress tolerance.ResultsA controllable SIM evolution module was devised based on a genetic toggle switch in Escherichia coli. The synthetic module enables expression and repression of the genes related to up- and down-regulation responses during SIM in a bistable way. Upon addition of different inducers, the module can be turned on or off, triggering transition to a mutagenic or a high-fidelity state and thus allowing periodic adaptive evolution. Six genes (recA, dinB, umuD, ropS, ropE, and nusA) in the up-regulation responses were evaluated for their potentials to enhance the SIM rate. Expression of recA, dinB, or ropS alone increased the SIM rate by 4.5- to 13.7-fold, whereas their combined expression improved the rate by 31.9-fold. Besides, deletion of mutL increased the SIM rate by 82-fold. Assembly of these genes into the SIM module in the mutL-deletion E. coli strain elevated the SIM rate by nearly 3000-fold. Accelerated adaptive evolution of E. coli equipped with this synthetic SIM module was demonstrated under n-butanol stress, with the minimal inhibitory concentration of n-butanol increasing by 56 % within 2.5 months.ConclusionsA synthetic SIM module was constructed to simulate cellular mutagenic responses during SIM. Based on this, a novel evolutionary engineering approach—SIM-based adaptive evolution—was developed to improve the n-butanol tolerance of E. coli.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-015-0276-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Microbial tolerance to different environmental stresses is of importance for efficient production of biofuels and biochemical

  • We have considered whether microbial stress tolerance, which is a complex physiological response to environmental perturbation [7], could be effectively engineered using the powerful concepts and tools of synthetic biology [6]

  • Design of the stress-induced mutagenesis (SIM) module SIM is the consequence of up-regulation of SOS, RopS, and RopE responses and down-regulation of mismatch repair (MMR) under stress

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Summary

Introduction

Microbial tolerance to different environmental stresses is of importance for efficient production of biofuels and biochemical Such traits are often improved by evolutionary engineering approaches including mutagen-induced mutagenesis and successive passage. A molecular mechanism of SIM has been elucidated to be mutagenic repair of DNA breaks This inspired us to develop a synthetic SIM module to simulate the mutagenic cellular response so as to accelerate microbial adaptive evolution for an improved stress tolerance. SIM experiments indicate that non-lethal stress will inhibit cell growth and trigger intracellular state transition to a transient hypermutation state in a small subpopulation (

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