Programming Dynamic Division of Labor Using Horizontal Gene Transfer.
The metabolic engineering of microbes has broad applications, including biomanufacturing, bioprocessing, and environmental remediation. The introduction of a complex, multistep pathway often imposes a substantial metabolic burden on the host cell, restraining the accumulation of productive biomass and limiting pathway efficiency. One strategy to alleviate metabolic burden is the division of labor (DOL) in which different subpopulations carry out different parts of the pathway and work together to convert a substrate into a final product. However, the maintenance of different engineered subpopulations is challenging due to competition and convoluted interstrain population dynamics. Through modeling, we show that dynamic division of labor (DDOL), which we define as the DOL between indiscrete populations capable of dynamic and reversible interchange, can overcome these limitations and enable the robust maintenance of burdensome, multistep pathways. We propose that DDOL can be mediated by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and use plasmid genomics to uncover evidence that DDOL is a strategy utilized by natural microbial communities. Our work suggests that bioengineers can harness HGT to stabilize synthetic metabolic pathways in microbial communities, enabling the development of robust engineered systems for deployment in a variety of contexts.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Microbiota
- Microbial Consortia
- Metabolic Engineering
- Genomics
- Gene Transfer, Horizontal
- 3102 Bioinformatics and computational biology
- 3101 Biochemistry and cell biology
- 0903 Biomedical Engineering
- 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
- 0304 Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Microbiota
- Microbial Consortia
- Metabolic Engineering
- Genomics
- Gene Transfer, Horizontal
- 3102 Bioinformatics and computational biology
- 3101 Biochemistry and cell biology
- 0903 Biomedical Engineering
- 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
- 0304 Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry