Abstract

Carbon dioxide emission and acidification during chemical biosynthesis are critical challenges toward microbial cell factories' sustainability and efficiency. Due to its acidophilic traits among workhorse lineages, the probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle (EcN) has emerged as a promising chemical bioproducer. However, EcN lacks a CO2-fixing system. Herein, EcN was equipped with a simultaneous CO2 fixation system and subsequently utilized to produce low-emission 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA). Two different artificial CO2-assimilating pathways were reconstructed: the novel ribose-1,5-bisphosphate (R15P) route and the conventional ribulose-5-phosphate (Ru5P) route. CRISPRi was employed to target the pfkAB and zwf genes in order to redirect the carbon flux. As expected, the CRISPRi design successfully strengthened the CO2 fixation. The CO2-fixing route via R15P resulted in high biomass, while the engineered Ru5P route acquired the highest 5-ALA and suppressed the CO2 release by 77%. CO2 fixation during 5-ALA production in EcN was successfully synchronized through fine-tuning the non-native pathways with CRISPRi.

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