Abstract

Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering offer potentially green and attractive routes to the production of high value compounds. The provision of high-quality parts and pathways is crucial in enabling the biosynthesis of chemicals using synthetic biology. While a number of regulatory parts that provide control at the transcriptional and translational level have been developed, relatively few exist at the protein level. Single domain antibodies (sdAb) such as camelid heavy chain variable fragments (VHH) possess binding characteristics which could be exploited for their development and use as novel parts for regulating metabolic pathways at the protein level in microbial cell factories. Here, a platform for the use of VHH as tools in Escherichia coli is developed and subsequently used to modulate linalool production in E. coli. The coproduction of a Design of Experiments (DoE) optimized pBbE8k His6-VHHCyDisCo system alongside a heterologous linalool production pathway facilitated the identification of anti-bLinS VHH that functioned as modulators of bLinS. This resulted in altered product profiles and significant variation in the titers of linalool, geraniol, nerolidol, and indole obtained. The ability to alter the production levels of high value terpenoids, such as linalool, in a tunable manner at the protein level could represent a significant step forward for the development of improved microbial cell factories. This study serves as a proof of principle indicating that VHH can be used to modulate enzyme activity in engineered pathways within E. coli. Given their almost limitless binding potential, we posit that single domain antibodies could emerge as powerful regulatory parts in synthetic biology applications.

Highlights

  • Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering offer potentially green and attractive routes to the production of high value compounds

  • With the ability to routinely generate functional VHH against almost any target using in vitro display technologies, this study demonstrates that Single domain antibodies (sdAb) have the potential to be utilized as powerful regulatory parts for a number of synthetic biology applications

  • In comparison, when the same anti-bLinS VHH were produced in the absence of an N-terminal His[6] tag and CyDisCo catalysts only 5 of the 24 VHH selected (20.1%) were functionally produced (Supplementary Table 4). These results suggest that the optimized conditions identified represent a suitable platform upon which VHH may be used as binders within the cytosol of E. coli

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Summary

Introduction

Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering offer potentially green and attractive routes to the production of high value compounds. When considering optimal production levels in alternative strains, the addition of an N-terminal His[6] tag, and the coproduction of the CyDisCo catalysts in NEB 10β following induction with 50 mM arabinose and incubation at 26.6 °C, had the highest desirability score of 0.874 (Figure 2C).

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