Browsing by Subject "Strain engineering"
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Publication Exploiting novel strategies for the production of surfactin in Bacillus subtilis cultures(2021) Hoffmann, Mareen; Hausmann, RudolfBiosurfactants are synthesized by various microorganisms. These surface-active molecules are a promising alternative to petrochemically and oleochemically produced surfactants. Advantageously, biosurfactants are reported to be better biodegradable and less toxic. The cyclic lipopeptide surfactin synthesized by Bacillus subtilis displays one interesting biosurfactant. Many studies report on the outstanding physico-chemical characteristics and add on benefits such as antimicrobial properties. Hence, surfactin has the potential to be used in a variety of industrial sectors. Nevertheless, processes ensuring both robustness and high titers are rare, especially as conventional aerobic bioreactor cultivations share one major disadvantage, namely excessive foaming. To approach industrial processes, different methods are applied, which can be categorized in three practices. These are (1) media and process parameter optimization, (2) strain engineering, and (3) investigating novel process strategies. For the latter category, the anaerobic growth by nitrate respiration poses an interesting foam-free alternative. In this sense, the anaerobic cultivation of B. subtilis to produce surfactin coupled with the three afore mentioned practices was addressed in this thesis targeting at a foam-free surfactin production process. In the 1st publication, the genome reduced strain B. subtilis IIG-Bs20-5-1, a derivative of the laboratory strain 168 able to synthesize surfactin, was evaluated with respect to its suitability as surfactin producer at various temperatures under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. It was hypothesized that a deletion of 10% of the genome, e.g., non-essential genes synthesizing prophages or the antibiotic bacilysin, saves metabolic resources and hence results in increased surfactin titers. Strains B. subtilis JABs24, a 168 derivative able to synthesize surfactin but without genome reduction, and the surfactin producer B. subtilis DSM 10T served for comparison. Although strain IIG-Bs20-5-1 was superior regarding specific growth rate µ and biomass yield YX/S, the strain was inferior with respect to surfactin titers, product related yields YP/S and YP/X, and specific productivity q. Indeed, compared to others in literature described strains, B. subtilis JABs24 was emphasized as promising target strain for further process development, reaching high surfactin titers of 1147 mg/L aerobically and 296 mg/L anaerobically as well as exceptionally high product yields YP/X under anaerobic conditions. Accordingly, iterative process optimization was hypothesized to improve anaerobically achieved surfactin titers. However, several aspects to consider of anaerobic growth of B. subtilis by nitrate respiration were described in the 2nd publication. Amongst others, increasing ammonium concentrations, resulting from nitrate reduction to ammonium via nitrite, were shown to have no impact on growth of strain JABs24, but surfactin titers and expression of nitrate reductase promoter PnarG were reduced. Nitrite was shown to peak within the first hours of cultivation and concentrations up to 10 mmol/L resulted in prolonged lag-phases. Moreover, acetate accumulated drastically during the time course of cultivation independent of glucose availability, thus decreasing the glucose flux into biomass. Acetate additionally influenced both specific growth rate µ and PnarG expression negatively. Concluding, the general feasibility of anaerobic fed-batch cultivations to synthesize surfactin was shown, but several aspects must be addressed in future works to make this strategy an equated process with aerobic cultivations. In the 3rd publication, a self-inducible surfactin synthesis process was presented where expression of the surfactin operon in B. subtilis JABs24 was induced under oxygen limited conditions. The native promoter of the srfA operon PsrfA was replaced by anaerobically inducible nitrate reductase promoter PnarG and nitrite reductase promoter PnasD. Shake flask cultivations with varying oxygen availabilities demonstrated that both PnarG and PnasD can serve as auto-inducible promoters. At high oxygen availability, surfactin was not produced in the promoter exchange strains. At lowest oxygen availability, the strain carrying PnarG reached lower surfactin titers than the native JABs24 strain, although expression levels of PnarG and PsrfA were similar. However, strain B. subtilis MG14 with PsrfA::PnasD reached 1.4-fold higher surfactin titers with 696 mg/L and an exceptionally high YP/X of 1.007 g/g with overall lower foam levels. Though, bioreactor cultivations have illustrated that the anaerobic induction must be performed slowly as to avoid cell lysis, resulting in so-defined aerobic-anaerobic switch processes. With further appropriate process optimization, a simple and robust surfactin production process with highly reduced or even no foam formation can be achieved employing strain B. subtilis MG14.Publication Influence of B. subtilis 3NA mutations in spo0A and abrB on surfactin production in B. subtilis 168(2021) Klausmann, Peter; Lilge, Lars; Aschern, Moritz; Hennemann, Katja; Henkel, Marius; Hausmann, Rudolf; Morabbi Heravi, KambizBackground: Bacillus subtilis is a well-established host for a variety of bioproduction processes, with much interest focused on the production of biosurfactants such as the cyclic lipopeptide surfactin. Surfactin production is tightly intertwined with quorum sensing and regulatory cell differentiation processes. As previous studies have shown, a non-sporulating B. subtilis strain 3NA encoding a functional sfp locus but mutations in the spo0A and abrB loci, called JABs32, exhibits noticeably increased surfactin production capabilities. In this work, the impacts of introducing JABs32 mutations in the genes spo0A, abrB and abh from 3NA into strain KM1016, a surfactin-forming derivative of B. subtilis 168, was investigated. This study aims to show these mutations are responsible for the surfactin producing performance of strain JABs32 in fed-batch bioreactor cultivations. Results: Single and double mutant strains of B. subtilis KM1016 were constructed encoding gene deletions of spo0A, abrB and homologous abh. Furthermore, an elongated abrB version, called abrB*, as described for JABs32 was integrated. Single and combinatory mutant strains were analysed in respect of growth behaviour, native PsrfA promoter expression and surfactin production. Deletion of spo0A led to increased growth rates with lowered surfactin titers, while deletion or elongation of abrB resulted in lowered growth rates and high surfactin yields, compared to KM1016. The double mutant strains B. subtilis KM1036 and KM1020 encoding Δspo0A abrB* and Δspo0A ΔabrB were compared to reference strain JABs32, with KM1036 exhibiting similar production parameters and impeded cell growth and surfactin production for KM1020. Bioreactor fed-batch cultivations comparing a Δspo0A abrB* mutant of KM1016, KM681, with JABs32 showed a decrease of 32% in surfactin concentration. Conclusions: The genetic differences of B. subtilis KM1016 and JABs32 give rise to new and improved fermentation methods through high cell density processes. Deletion of the spo0A locus was shown to be the reason for higher biomass concentrations. Only in combination with an elongation of abrB was this strain able to reach high surfactin titers of 18.27 g L−1 in fed-batch cultivations. This work shows, that a B. subtilis strain can be turned into a high cell density surfactin production strain by introduction of two mutations.