Using osmotic stress to stabilize mannitol production in sp. PCC6803.

Biotechnol Biofuels

Molecular Microbial Physiology Group, Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Amsterdam, Science Park 904, 1098 XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mannitol is a C(6) polyol used as a sweetener in food and an antioxidant in medicine; efforts to produce it sustainably through cyanobacteria face genetic instability challenges.
  • The study investigates the stabilizing role of mannitol as a compatible solute in freshwater cyanobacterium PCC6803, enhancing salt tolerance, especially in strains lacking native solutes.
  • Results show that mannitol production is more stable under salt stress in genetically impaired strains, while control strains lose production capability quickly, with mutations disrupting gene function.

Article Abstract

Background: Mannitol is a C(6) polyol that is used in the food and medical sector as a sweetener and antioxidant, respectively. The sustainable production of mannitol, especially via the direct conversion of CO by photosynthetic cyanobacteria, has become increasingly appealing. However, previous work aiming to achieve mannitol production in the marine sp. PCC7002 via heterologous expression of mannitol-1-phosphate-5-dehydrogenase () and mannitol-1-phosphatase (, in short: a 'mannitol cassette'), proved to be genetically unstable. In this study, we aim to overcome this genetic instability by conceiving a strategy to stabilize mannitol production using sp. PCC6803 as a model cyanobacterium.

Results: Here, we explore the stabilizing effect that mannitol production may have on cells faced with osmotic stress, in the freshwater cyanobacterium sp. PCC6803. We first validated that mannitol can function as a compatible solute in sp. PCC6803, and in derivative strains in which the ability to produce one or both of the native compatible solutes was impaired. Wild-type , complemented with a mannitol cassette, indeed showed increased salt tolerance, which was even more evident in strains in which the ability to synthesize the endogenous compatible solutes was impaired. Next we tested the genetic stability of all these strains with respect to their mannitol productivity, with and without salt stress, during prolonged turbidostat cultivations. The obtained results show that mannitol production under salt stress conditions in the strain that cannot synthesize its endogenous compatible solutes is remarkably stable, while the control strain completely loses this ability in only 6 days. DNA sequencing results of the control groups that lost the ability to synthesize mannitol revealed that multiple types of mutation occurred in the gene that can explain the disruption of mannitol production.

Conclusions: Mannitol production in freshwater sp. PCC6803 confers it with increased salt tolerance. Under this strategy, genetically instability which was the major challenge for mannitol production in cyanobacteria is tackled. This paper marks the first report of utilization of the response to salt stress as a factor that can increase the stability of mannitol production in a cyanobacterial cell factory.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7331161PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13068-020-01755-3DOI Listing

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