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Genome-Scale Metabolic Modeling of Halomonas elongata 153B Explains Polyhydroxyalkanoate and Ectoine Biosynthesis in Hypersaline Environments. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Halomonas elongata is a microorganism that thrives in salty environments and is studied for its production of useful compounds like PHAs and ectoine.
  • A genome-scale metabolic model (iEB1239) was developed, including detailed information about its metabolites, reactions, and genes, which helps understand its metabolic processes and potential for growth on different carbon sources.
  • The research highlights key metabolic bottlenecks and adaptations in H. elongata under hypersaline conditions, providing valuable insights for improving biotechnological applications and engineering strategies for PHA production.

Article Abstract

Halomonas elongata thrives in hypersaline environments producing polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) and osmoprotectants such as ectoine. Despite its biotechnological importance, several aspects of the dynamics of its metabolism remain elusive. Here, we construct and validate a genome-scale metabolic network model for H. elongata 153B. Then, we investigate the flux distribution dynamics during optimal growth, ectoine, and PHA biosynthesis using statistical methods, and a pipeline based on shadow prices. Lastly, we use optimization algorithms to uncover novel engineering targets to increase PHA production. The resulting model (iEB1239) includes 1534 metabolites, 2314 reactions, and 1239 genes. iEB1239 can reproduce growth on several carbon sources and predict growth on previously unreported ones. It also reproduces biochemical phenotypes related to Oad and Ppc gene functions in ectoine biosynthesis. A flux distribution analysis during optimal ectoine and PHA biosynthesis shows decreased energy production through oxidative phosphorylation. Furthermore, our analysis unveils a diverse spectrum of metabolic alterations that extend beyond mere flux changes to encompass heightened precursor production for ectoine and PHA synthesis. Crucially, these findings capture other metabolic changes linked to adaptation in hypersaline environments. Bottlenecks in the glycolysis and fatty acid metabolism pathways are identified, in addition to PhaC, which has been shown to increase PHA production when overexpressed. Overall, our pipeline demonstrates the potential of genome-scale metabolic models in combination with statistical approaches to obtain insights into the metabolism of H. elongata. Our platform can be exploited for researching environmental adaptation, and for designing and optimizing metabolic engineering strategies for bioproduct synthesis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/biot.202400267DOI Listing

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