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<p>To produce styrene in <i>S. cerevisiae</i>, the PAL2 gene from <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> is expressed. The Pal2 enzyme catalyzes the reaction of phenylalanine to trans-cinnamate. Natively present Fdc1 then converts trans-cinnamate into styrene. <i>PAL2</i>-containing strains are cultured on glucose medium, and HPLC is performed.</p> | <p>To produce styrene in <i>S. cerevisiae</i>, the PAL2 gene from <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> is expressed. The Pal2 enzyme catalyzes the reaction of phenylalanine to trans-cinnamate. Natively present Fdc1 then converts trans-cinnamate into styrene. <i>PAL2</i>-containing strains are cultured on glucose medium, and HPLC is performed.</p> | ||
− | <figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/f/f8/T--Groningen--glucose-styreneproduction-clean.png" class="responsive-img"><figcaption><i>Figure 4: HPLC 254 nm intensity plotted against time. | + | <figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/f/f8/T--Groningen--glucose-styreneproduction-clean.png" class="responsive-img"><figcaption><i>Figure 4: HPLC 254 nm intensity plotted against retention time. A peak is present at 17,5 min, corresponding to styrene. No peak is present for the control. Styrene production in yeast using glucose is achieved. </i></figcaption></figure> |
<p>As shown in figure 4, styrene is present in the <i>PAL2</i>-containing strain, but not in the control strain. This suggests that Pal2 indeed converts phenylalanine to trans-cinnamate, which can be natively converted to styrene. It thus demonstrates that we meet our second goal, of creating styrene using <i>S. cerevisiae</i>.</p> | <p>As shown in figure 4, styrene is present in the <i>PAL2</i>-containing strain, but not in the control strain. This suggests that Pal2 indeed converts phenylalanine to trans-cinnamate, which can be natively converted to styrene. It thus demonstrates that we meet our second goal, of creating styrene using <i>S. cerevisiae</i>.</p> | ||
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Revision as of 23:28, 17 October 2018
Still under construction, used to demonstrate ideas -JM
The goal of our project is threefold. First, we want to degrade cellulose to glucose using Saccharomyces cerevisiae expressing an artificial cellulosome. Secondly, we want to produce styrene from glucose using S. cerevisiae. The final goal is to produce styrene directly from cellulose in a consolidated bioprocess.
We have designed and constructed S. cerevisiae strains that meet these goals. A number of experiments were performed to prove the functionality of these strains.
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Cellulose degradation
As cellulose is difficult to degrade, we first investigated different cellulose pretreatment methods. We used commercially available cellulases BglI, CbhI, and EgII (EgA) and the EgII we express in yeast. Using these enzymes we investigated ball milling of ReCell (toilet paper purified from waste water obtained from a sponsor) and phosphorylation of pure cellulose.
Subsequently, we transformed S. cerevisiae with an artificial cellulosome containing 3 different cellulases and a scaffold. The cellulosome activity was tested by growing the strains on cellobiose (𝛃-1,4 linked dimer of glucose) and cellulose. Sufficient cellulosome activity should enable the yeast to grow on cellulose or cellobiose.
OD600 at T=0h OD600 at T=12h D600 at T=36h YPH499++ 0.51 0.55 1.36 negative control 0.1 0.06 0.1 Figure 1 and 2 show CbhI and EgII can hydrolyze phosphorylated cellulose and ball-milled ReCell. Growth on cellobiose demonstrates BglI activity, as it degrades cellobiose. Together these results demonstrate the functionality of all 3 cellulases in our cellulosome.
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Styrene production
To produce styrene in S. cerevisiae, the PAL2 gene from Arabidopsis thaliana is expressed. The Pal2 enzyme catalyzes the reaction of phenylalanine to trans-cinnamate. Natively present Fdc1 then converts trans-cinnamate into styrene. PAL2-containing strains are cultured on glucose medium, and HPLC is performed.
As shown in figure 4, styrene is present in the PAL2-containing strain, but not in the control strain. This suggests that Pal2 indeed converts phenylalanine to trans-cinnamate, which can be natively converted to styrene. It thus demonstrates that we meet our second goal, of creating styrene using S. cerevisiae.
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Consolidated bioprocessing
After demonstrating that both original goals of the project have been met, we decided to take it further. The PAL2 gene is expressed in a S. cerevisiae strain that is also expressing the artificial cellulosome. This strain is then cultured with cellobiose.
As shown in figure 5, the trans-cinnamate levels are higher in the strain grown on cellobiose compared to the strain grown without cellobiose. Figure 6 shows styrene production in the strain grown on cellobiose, whereas nothing is visible in the control. This demonstrates that the consolidated strain is able to convert cellobiose into trans-cinnamate and styrene.
In conclusion, we have demonstrated that we can grow our S. cerevisiae strains on cellulose, and that it can produce styrene from glucose and cellobiose. This leads to the reasonable assumption that this strain is able to break down and grow on cellulose and meanwhile produce styrene.