open access publication

Article, 2024

Tailoring regulatory components for metabolic engineering in cyanobacteria

Physiologia Plantarum, ISSN 0031-9317, 1399-3054, 0193-0648, Volume 176, 3, Page e14316, 10.1111/ppl.14316

Contributors

Bolay, Paul [1] Dodge, Nadia [2] Janssen, Kim [1] Jensen, Poul Erik Hyldgaard 0000-0001-6524-7723 [2] Lindberg, Pia (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Uppsala University
  2. [NORA names: Sweden; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] University of Copenhagen
  4. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

The looming climate crisis has prompted an ever-growing interest in cyanobacteria due to their potential as sustainable production platforms for the synthesis of energy carriers and value-added chemicals from CO2 and sunlight. Nonetheless, cyanobacteria are yet to compete with heterotrophic systems in terms of space-time yields and consequently production costs. One major drawback leading to the low production performance observed in cyanobacteria is the limited ability to utilize the full capacity of the photosynthetic apparatus and its associated systems, i.e. CO2 fixation and the directly connected metabolism. In this review, novel insights into various levels of metabolic regulation of cyanobacteria are discussed, including the potential of targeting these regulatory mechanisms to create a chassis with a phenotype favorable for photoautotrophic production. Compared to conventional metabolic engineering approaches, minor perturbations of regulatory mechanisms can have wide-ranging effects.

Keywords

apparatus, approach, capacity, carriers, chassis, chemical, climate crisis, components, cost, crisis, cyanobacteria, effect, energy carrier, engineering, engineering approach, fixation, heterotrophic system, i., levels, looming climate crisis, low production performance, mechanism, metabolic engineering, metabolic engineering approaches, metabolism, performance, perturbation, phenotype, photoautotrophic production, photosynthetic apparatus, potential, production, production costs, production performance, regulatory components, regulatory mechanisms, review, space-time yield, sunlight, synthesis, system, value-added chemicals, yield

Funders

  • Swedish Energy Agency
  • Carl Tryggers stiftelse för vetenskaplig forskning
  • Novo Nordisk Foundation

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