Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens

The development of processes for sustainable energy and chemical production is of great importance for the health of our planet. Utilising suitable feedstocks such as renewable resources and existing waste streams is central to making such processes a reality. Microorganisms can be employed in the p...

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Main Author: Mansfield, Robert Patrick William
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51833/
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author Mansfield, Robert Patrick William
author_facet Mansfield, Robert Patrick William
author_sort Mansfield, Robert Patrick William
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The development of processes for sustainable energy and chemical production is of great importance for the health of our planet. Utilising suitable feedstocks such as renewable resources and existing waste streams is central to making such processes a reality. Microorganisms can be employed in the processing of a diverse range of such feedstocks, offering unique routes of production for useful and valuable chemical products. Acetogenic organisms, capable of fermenting single carbon (C1) feedstocks are especially interesting from the perspective of industrial application. Their natural metabolism and biochemistry enables fixation of low energy C1 compounds, under conditions which would typically be unfeasible with traditional chemical catalysts. Genetic research and development of new acetogenic species opens the door to industrially feasible, and economically attractive, sustainable bioprocessing. This study outlines the genetic development of the methanol and syngas fermenting acetogen E. limosum. This includes establishing gene-transfer and genetic engineering tools in this organism for first time. Additionally, we demonstrate the genetic engineering of synthetic metabolic pathways in this strain to enable production of valuable chemicals, acetone and isopropanol. Gene-transfer is a cornerstone of modern genetic research in microorganisms, and so effective methods of establishing it are of significant value. We present the development of an improved methodology for enabling and enhancing gene transfer in recalcitrant microorganisms which contain active restriction modification (RM) systems. The method harnesses lambda-red recombineering to support the rapid creation of tailored methylation donor (MD) strains for the preparation and protection of transforming plasmids. The process is uniquely designed in a manner which enables compatibility with both electroporation and conjugation methods of gene transfer.
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spelling nottingham-518332025-02-28T14:07:11Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51833/ Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens Mansfield, Robert Patrick William The development of processes for sustainable energy and chemical production is of great importance for the health of our planet. Utilising suitable feedstocks such as renewable resources and existing waste streams is central to making such processes a reality. Microorganisms can be employed in the processing of a diverse range of such feedstocks, offering unique routes of production for useful and valuable chemical products. Acetogenic organisms, capable of fermenting single carbon (C1) feedstocks are especially interesting from the perspective of industrial application. Their natural metabolism and biochemistry enables fixation of low energy C1 compounds, under conditions which would typically be unfeasible with traditional chemical catalysts. Genetic research and development of new acetogenic species opens the door to industrially feasible, and economically attractive, sustainable bioprocessing. This study outlines the genetic development of the methanol and syngas fermenting acetogen E. limosum. This includes establishing gene-transfer and genetic engineering tools in this organism for first time. Additionally, we demonstrate the genetic engineering of synthetic metabolic pathways in this strain to enable production of valuable chemicals, acetone and isopropanol. Gene-transfer is a cornerstone of modern genetic research in microorganisms, and so effective methods of establishing it are of significant value. We present the development of an improved methodology for enabling and enhancing gene transfer in recalcitrant microorganisms which contain active restriction modification (RM) systems. The method harnesses lambda-red recombineering to support the rapid creation of tailored methylation donor (MD) strains for the preparation and protection of transforming plasmids. The process is uniquely designed in a manner which enables compatibility with both electroporation and conjugation methods of gene transfer. 2018-07-12 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51833/1/Mansfield%20R%20-%20Thesis%20-%20post%20corrections%20-%20FINAL.pdf Mansfield, Robert Patrick William (2018) Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Genetic engineering synthetic biology acetogen gene transfer transformation CRISPR/Cas9 metabolic engineering PhD thesis
spellingShingle Genetic engineering
synthetic biology
acetogen
gene transfer
transformation
CRISPR/Cas9
metabolic engineering
PhD thesis
Mansfield, Robert Patrick William
Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
title Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
title_full Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
title_fullStr Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
title_full_unstemmed Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
title_short Developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
title_sort developments in genetic engineering of novel acetogens
topic Genetic engineering
synthetic biology
acetogen
gene transfer
transformation
CRISPR/Cas9
metabolic engineering
PhD thesis
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51833/