609066 Genome-Scale Metabolic Modeling of Clostridium thermocellum for Omics Integration and Modular Cell Design

Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division (15) (Poster Gallery)
Sergio Garcia1, R Adam Thompson2, Richard J. Giannone3, Satyakam Dash4, Costas Maranas4, Cong T. Trinh1 and Will Khomtchenko1, (1)Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, (2)Quantitative Translational Pharmacology, DMPK-BA, Abbvie Inc., North Chicago, IL, (3)Chemical Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, (4)Department of Chemical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA

It is widely recognized that an important step towards addressing climate change is the reduction of carbon emissions through renewable manufacturing. We can accomplish lower carbon emissions in the production of fuels and chemicals by replacing petroleum-based processes for plant biomass conversion by microbial catalysts. The anaerobic thermophile Clostridium thermocellum is a promising bacterium for bioconversion due to its capability to efficiently degrade untreated lignocellulosic biomass. However, the complex metabolism of C. thermocellum is not fully understood, hindering metabolic engineering to achieve high titers, rates, and yields of targeted molecules. In this study, we developed an updated genome-scale metabolic model of C. thermocellum that accounts for recent metabolic findings, has improved prediction accuracy, and is standard-conformant to ensure easy reproducibility. We illustrated two applications of the developed model. We first formulated a multi-omics integration protocol and used it to understand redox metabolism and potential bottlenecks in biofuel (e.g., ethanol) production in C. thermocellum. Second, we used the metabolic model to design modular cells for efficient production of alcohols and esters with broad applications as flavors, fragrances, solvents, and fuels. The proposed designs not only feature intuitive push-and-pull metabolic engineering strategies, but also novel manipulations around important central metabolic branch-points. We anticipate the developed genome-scale metabolic model will provide a useful tool for system analysis of C. thermocellum metabolism to fundamentally understand its physiology and guide metabolic engineering strategies to rapidly generate modular production strains for effective biosynthesis of biofuels and biochemicals from lignocellulosic biomass.

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