Back to Search Start Over

Metabolic impact of heterologous protein production in Pseudomonas putida: Insights into carbon and energy flux control.

Authors :
Vogeleer, Philippe
Millard, Pierre
Arbulú, Ana-Sofia Ortega
Pflüger-Grau, Katharina
Kremling, Andreas
Létisse, Fabien
Source :
Metabolic Engineering. Jan2024, Vol. 81, p26-37. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

For engineered microorganisms, the production of heterologous proteins that are often useless to host cells represents a burden on resources, which have to be shared with normal cellular processes. Within a certain metabolic leeway, this competitive process has no impact on growth. However, once this leeway, or free capacity, is fully utilized, the extra load becomes a metabolic burden that inhibits cellular processes and triggers a broad cellular response, reducing cell growth and often hindering the production of heterologous proteins. In this study, we sought to characterize the metabolic rearrangements occurring in the central metabolism of Pseudomonas putida at different levels of metabolic load. To this end, we constructed a P. putida KT2440 strain that expressed two genes encoding fluorescent proteins, one in the genome under constitutive expression to monitor the free capacity, and the other on an inducible plasmid to probe heterologous protein production. We found that metabolic fluxes are considerably reshuffled, especially at the level of periplasmic pathways, as soon as the metabolic load exceeds the free capacity. Heterologous protein production leads to the decoupling of anabolism and catabolism, resulting in large excess energy production relative to the requirements of protein biosynthesis. Finally, heterologous protein production was found to exert a stronger control on carbon fluxes than on energy fluxes, indicating that the flexible nature of P. putida 's central metabolic network is solicited to sustain energy production. • Heterologous protein production in P. putida reshuffles the periplasmic metabolism. • Increased protein production progressively decouples catabolism from anabolism. • Protein production exerts a stronger control on energy than on carbon fluxes. • Glucose is directed towards ATP production to meet the elevated energy demands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10967176
Volume :
81
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Metabolic Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174917334
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymben.2023.10.005