Full metadata
Title
Engineering Synthetic Coculture Systems for Enhanced Bioproduction Applications
Description
Bioconversion of lignocellulosic sugars is often suboptimal due to global regulatory mechanisms such as carbon catabolite repression and incomplete/inefficient metabolic pathways. While conventional bioprocessing strategies for metabolic engineering have predominantly focused on a single engineered strain, the alternative development of synthetic microbial communities facilitates the execution of complex metabolic tasks by exploiting unique community features (i.e., modularity, division of labor, and facile tunability). In this dissertation, these features are leveraged to develop a suite of generalizable strategies and transformative technologies for engineering Escherichia coli coculture systems to more efficiently utilize lignocellulosic sugar mixtures. This was achieved by rationally pairing and systematically engineering catabolically-orthogonal Escherichia coli sugar specialists. Coculture systems were systematically engineered, as derived from either wild-type Escherichia coli W, ethanologenic LY180, lactogenic TG114 or succinogenic KJ122. Net catabolic activities were then readily balanced by simple tuning of the inoculum ratio between sugar specialists, ultimately enabling improved co-utilization (98% of 100 g L-1 total sugars) of glucose-xylose mixtures (2:1 by mass) under simple batch fermentation conditions. We next extended this strategy to a coculture-coproduction system capable of capturing and fixing CO2 evolved during biofuel production through inter-strain metabolic cooperation. Holistically, this work contributes to an improved understanding of the dynamic behavior of synthetic microbial consortia as enhanced bioproduction platforms and carbon conservation strategy for renewable fuels and chemicals from non-food carbohydrates
Date Created
2021
Contributors
- Flores, Andrew David (Author)
- Nielsen, David R (Thesis advisor)
- Wang, Xuan (Thesis advisor)
- Varman, Arul M (Committee member)
- Nannenga, Brent (Committee member)
- Wheeldon, Ian (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
200 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.161599
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
Note
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2021
Field of study: Chemical Engineering
System Created
- 2021-11-16 02:26:17
System Modified
- 2021-11-30 12:51:28
- 2 years 11 months ago
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