Abstract

BackgroundThe bacterium Escherichia coli can be grown employing various carbohydrates as sole carbon and energy source. Among them, glucose affords the highest growth rate. This sugar is nowadays widely employed as raw material in industrial fermentations. When E. coli grows in a medium containing non-limiting concentrations of glucose, a metabolic imbalance occurs whose main consequence is acetate secretion. The production of this toxic organic acid reduces strain productivity and viability. Solutions to this problem include reducing glucose concentration by substrate feeding strategies or the generation of mutant strains with impaired glucose import capacity. In this work, a collection of E. coli strains with inactive genes encoding proteins involved in glucose transport where generated to determine the effects of reduced glucose import capacity on growth rate, biomass yield, acetate and production of an experimental plasmid DNA vaccine (pHN).ResultsA group of 15 isogenic derivatives of E. coli W3110 were generated with single and multiple deletions of genes encoding glucose, mannose, beta-glucoside, maltose and N-acetylglucosamine components of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS), as well as the galactose symporter and the Mgl galactose/glucose ABC transporter. These strains were characterized by growing them in mineral salts medium supplemented with 2.5 g/L glucose. Maximum specific rates of glucose consumption (qs) spanning from 1.33 to 0.32 g/g h were displayed by the group of mutants and W3110, which resulted in specific growth rates ranging from 0.65-0.18 h-1. Acetate accumulation was reduced or abolished in cultures with all mutant strains. W3110 and five selected mutant derivatives were transformed with pHN. A 3.2-fold increase in pHN yield on biomass was observed in cultures of a mutant strain with deletion of genes encoding the glucose and mannose PTS components, as well as Mgl.ConclusionsThe group of E. coli mutants generated in this study displayed a reduction or elimination of overflow metabolism and a linear correlation between qs and the maximum specific growth rate as well as the acetate production rate. By comparing DNA vaccine production parameters among some of these mutants, it was possible to identify a near-optimal glucose import rate value for this particular application. The strains employed in this study should be a useful resource for studying the effects of different predefined qs values on production capacity for various biotechnological products.

Highlights

  • The bacterium Escherichia coli can be grown employing various carbohydrates as sole carbon and energy source

  • Generation and characterization of E. coli mutant strains lacking proteins involved in glucose import The aim of this study was to generate and characterize a group of mutants derived from strain W3110, displaying a wide range of qs values

  • The strategy followed to progressively decrease glucose import capacity consisted on inactivating genes encoding phosphotransferase system (PTS) components and non-PTS transport proteins

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Summary

Introduction

The bacterium Escherichia coli can be grown employing various carbohydrates as sole carbon and energy source. When E. coli grows in a medium containing non-limiting concentrations of glucose, a metabolic imbalance occurs whose main consequence is acetate secretion The production of this toxic organic acid reduces strain productivity and viability. Biotechnological processes with Escherichia coli strains modified for protein, DNA or metabolite production frequently employ media containing glucose [1]. This carbohydrate is widely utilized as a raw material since it is relatively inexpensive and it is the preferred carbon and energy source for E. coli and other industrial microorganisms. An E. coli mutant strain with inactive glucose PTS complex still displays growth on glucose with a rate corresponding to about 80% of that observed in a wild type strain [5]

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