Abstract

Genome-scale metabolic model (GEM) of Escherichia coli has been published with applications in predicting metabolic engineering capabilities on different carbon sources and directing biological discovery. The use of glycerol as an alternative carbon source is economically viable in biorefinery. The use of GEM for predicting metabolic gene deletion of lactate dehydrogenase (ldhA) for increasing succinate production in Escherichia coli from glycerol carbon source remained largely unexplored. Here, I hypothesized that metabolic gene knockout of ldhA in E. coli from glycerol could increase succinate production. A proof-of-principle strain was constructed and designated as E. coli BMS5 (ΔldhA), by predicting increased succinate production in E. coli GEM and confirmed the predicted outcomes using wet cell experiments. The mutant GEM (ΔldhA) predicted 11% increase in succinate production from glycerol compared to its wild-type model (iAF1260), and the E. coli BMS5 (ΔldhA) showed 1.05 g/l and its corresponding wild-type produced .05 g/l (23-fold increase). The proof-of-principle strain constructed in this study confirmed the aforementioned hypothesis and further elucidated the fact that E. coli GEM can prospectively and effectively predict metabolic engineering interventions using glycerol as substrate and could serve as platform for new strain design strategies and biological discovery.

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