Abstract
Marine red algal biomass is a promising feedstock for sustainable production of value-added chemicals. However, the major constituents of red algal biomass, such as agar and carrageenan, are not easily assimilated by most industrial metabolic chassis developed to date. Synthetic biology offers a solution by utilizing nonmodel organisms as metabolic chassis for consolidated biological processes. In this study, the marine heterotrophic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas atlantica T6c was harnessed as a metabolic chassis to produce value-added chemicals from the affordable red algal galactans or agaropectin, a byproduct of industrial agarose production. To construct a heterologous gene expression device in P. atlantica T6c, promoters related to agar metabolism were screened from the differentially expressed genes using RNA-Seq analysis. The expression device was built and tested with selected promoters fused to a reporter gene and tuned by incorporation of a cognate repressor predicted from the agar-specific polysaccharide utilization locus. The feasibility of the marine bacterial metabolic chassis was examined by introducing the biosynthetic gene clusters of β-carotene and violacein. Our results demonstrate that the metabolic chassis platform enables direct conversion of low-cost red algal galactans or industrial waste agaropectin into valuable bioactive pigments without any pretreatment of biomass. The developed marine bacterial chassis could potentially be used in a biorefinery framework to produce value-added chemicals from marine algal galactans.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1782-1793 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | ACS Synthetic Biology |
Volume | 12 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2023 Jun 16 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This study was funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grants (NRF-2019R1A2C1089704 and NRF-2022R1A4A3033775). This study was also funded by Korea University grant. We thank Prof. Kyoung Heon Kim, (Food Bioengineering Laboratory, Korea University) for providing raw red algal powder, Henrick Larsen (Lonza Copenhagen Aps, Denmark) for providing agaropectin, and Jonghyun Hwang for assisting the conjugation experiments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.
Keywords
- Pseudoalteromonas atlantica T6c
- bioconversion
- marine heterotrophic bacteria
- metabolic chassis
- red algal biomass
- value-added chemicals
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Biomedical Engineering
- Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)