• Title of article

    Linking genes to microbial growth kinetics—An integrated biochemical systems engineering approach

  • Author/Authors

    Koutinas، نويسنده , , Michalis and Kiparissides، نويسنده , , Alexandros and Silva-Rocha، نويسنده , , Rafael and Lam، نويسنده , , Ming-Chi and Martins dos Santos، نويسنده , , Vitor A.P. and de Lorenzo، نويسنده , , Victor and Pistikopoulos، نويسنده , , Efstratios N. and Mantalaris، نويسنده , , Athanasios، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    401
  • To page
    413
  • Abstract
    The majority of models describing the kinetic properties of a microorganism for a given substrate are unstructured and empirical. They are formulated in this manner so that the complex mechanism of cell growth is simplified. Herein, a novel approach for modelling microbial growth kinetics is proposed, linking biomass growth and substrate consumption rates to the gene regulatory programmes that control these processes. A dynamic model of the TOL (pWW0) plasmid of Pseudomonas putida mt-2 has been developed, describing the molecular interactions that lead to the transcription of the upper and meta operons, known to produce the enzymes for the oxidative catabolism of m-xylene. The genetic circuit model was combined with a growth kinetic model decoupling biomass growth and substrate consumption rates, which are expressed as independent functions of the rate-limiting enzymes produced by the operons. Estimation of model parameters and validation of the modelʹs predictive capability were successfully performed in batch cultures of mt-2 fed with different concentrations of m-xylene, as confirmed by relative mRNA concentration measurements of the promoters encoded in TOL. The growth formation and substrate utilisation patterns could not be accurately described by traditional Monod-type models for a wide range of conditions, demonstrating the critical importance of gene regulation for the development of advanced models closely predicting complex bioprocesses. In contrast, the proposed strategy, which utilises quantitative information pertaining to upstream molecular events that control the production of rate-limiting enzymes, predicts the catabolism of a substrate and biomass formation and could be of central importance for the design of optimal bioprocesses.
  • Keywords
    Genetic circuit , Metabolic engineering , Pseudomonas putida , Dynamic model , m-Xylene , pWW0 (TOL) plasmid
  • Journal title
    Metabolic Engineering
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Metabolic Engineering
  • Record number

    1429163