Continuous bioactivity-dependent evolution of an antibiotic biosynthetic pathway
Author(s)
Johnston, Chad W.; Badran, Ahmed H.; Collins, James J.
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© 2020, The Author(s). Antibiotic biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) produce bioactive metabolites that impart a fitness advantage to their producer, providing a mechanism for natural selection. This selection drives antibiotic evolution and adapts BGCs for expression in different organisms, potentially providing clues to improve heterologous expression of antibiotics. Here, we use phage-assisted continuous evolution (PACE) to achieve bioactivity-dependent adaptation of the BGC for the antibiotic bicyclomycin (BCM), facilitating improved production in a heterologous host. This proof-of-principle study demonstrates that features of natural bioactivity-dependent evolution can be engineered to access unforeseen routes of improving metabolic pathways and product yields.
Date issued
2020-08Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Synthetic Biology Center; Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and TechnologyJournal
Nature Communications
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN
2041-1723