TY - JOUR
T1 - Metabolic engineering to expand the substrate spectrum of Pseudomonas putida toward sucrose
AU - Löwe, Hannes
AU - Schmauder, Lukas
AU - Hobmeier, Karina
AU - Kremling, Andreas
AU - Pflüger-Grau, Katharina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2017/8
Y1 - 2017/8
N2 - Sucrose is an important disaccharide used as a substrate in many industrial applications. It is a major component of molasses, a cheap by-product of the sugar industry. Unfortunately, not all industrially relevant organisms, among them Pseudomonas putida, are capable of metabolizing sucrose. We chose a metabolic engineering approach to circumvent this blockage and equip P. putida with the activities necessary to consume sucrose. Therefore, we constructed a pair of broad-host range mini-transposons (pSST – sucrose splitting transposon), carrying either cscA, encoding an invertase able to split sucrose into glucose and fructose, or additionally cscB, encoding a sucrose permease. Introduction of cscA was sufficient to convey sucrose consumption and the additional presence of cscB had no further effect, though the sucrose permease was built and localized to the membrane. Sucrose was split extracellularly by the activity of the invertase CscA leaking out of the cell. The transposons were also used to confer sucrose consumption to Cupriavidus necator. Interestingly, in this strain, CscB acted as a glucose transporter, such that C. necator also gained the ability to grow on glucose. Thus, the pSST transposons are functional tools to extend the substrate spectrum of Gram-negative bacterial strains toward sucrose.
AB - Sucrose is an important disaccharide used as a substrate in many industrial applications. It is a major component of molasses, a cheap by-product of the sugar industry. Unfortunately, not all industrially relevant organisms, among them Pseudomonas putida, are capable of metabolizing sucrose. We chose a metabolic engineering approach to circumvent this blockage and equip P. putida with the activities necessary to consume sucrose. Therefore, we constructed a pair of broad-host range mini-transposons (pSST – sucrose splitting transposon), carrying either cscA, encoding an invertase able to split sucrose into glucose and fructose, or additionally cscB, encoding a sucrose permease. Introduction of cscA was sufficient to convey sucrose consumption and the additional presence of cscB had no further effect, though the sucrose permease was built and localized to the membrane. Sucrose was split extracellularly by the activity of the invertase CscA leaking out of the cell. The transposons were also used to confer sucrose consumption to Cupriavidus necator. Interestingly, in this strain, CscB acted as a glucose transporter, such that C. necator also gained the ability to grow on glucose. Thus, the pSST transposons are functional tools to extend the substrate spectrum of Gram-negative bacterial strains toward sucrose.
KW - Pseudomonas putida
KW - metabolic engineering
KW - sucrose metabolism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85017273506&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/mbo3.473
DO - 10.1002/mbo3.473
M3 - Article
C2 - 28349670
AN - SCOPUS:85017273506
SN - 2045-8827
VL - 6
JO - MicrobiologyOpen
JF - MicrobiologyOpen
IS - 4
M1 - e00473
ER -