@article{HeHoeperDodenhoeftetal.2020, author = {He, Hai and H{\"o}per, Rune and Dodenh{\"o}ft, Moritz and Marli{\`e}re, Philippe and Bar-Even, Arren}, title = {An optimized methanol assimilation pathway relying on promiscuous formaldehyde-condensing aldolases in E. coli}, series = {Metabolic Engineering}, volume = {60}, journal = {Metabolic Engineering}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam [u.a.]}, issn = {1096-7176}, doi = {10.1016/j.ymben.2020.03.002}, pages = {1 -- 13}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Engineering biotechnological microorganisms to use methanol as a feedstock for bioproduction is a major goal for the synthetic metabolism community. Here, we aim to redesign the natural serine cycle for implementation in E. coli. We propose the homoserine cycle, relying on two promiscuous formaldehyde aldolase reactions, as a superior pathway design. The homoserine cycle is expected to outperform the serine cycle and its variants with respect to biomass yield, thermodynamic favorability, and integration with host endogenous metabolism. Even as compared to the RuMP cycle, the most efficient naturally occurring methanol assimilation route, the homoserine cycle is expected to support higher yields of a wide array of products. We test the in vivo feasibility of the homoserine cycle by constructing several E. coli gene deletion strains whose growth is coupled to the activity of different pathway segments. Using this approach, we demonstrate that all required promiscuous enzymes are active enough to enable growth of the auxotrophic strains. Our findings thus identify a novel metabolic solution that opens the way to an optimized methylotrophic platform.}, language = {en} }