Abstract
All life on Earth requires nitrogen to survive. About 78% of the atmosphere alone is nitrogen, yet humans cannot use it directly. Instead, we obtain the nitrogen we need for our survival through the food we eat. For more than 100 years, a substantial portion of agricultural productivity has relied on industrial methods for nitrogen fertilizer synthesis, which consumes significant amounts of nonrenewable energy resources and exacerbates environmental degradation and human-induced climate change. Promising alternatives to these industrial methods rely on engineering the only biological pathway for generating bioaccessible nitrogen: microbial nitrogen fixation. Bioengineering strategies require an extensive understanding of underlying genetics in nitrogen-fixing microbes, but genetic tools for this critical goal remain lacking. The CRISPRi gene silencing system that we report, developed in the broadly utilized nitrogen-fixing bacterial model, Azotobacter vinelandii , is an important step toward elucidating the complexity of nitrogen fixation genetics and enabling their manipulation.
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CITATION STYLE
Russell, S. J., Garcia, A. K., & Kaçar, B. (2024). A CRISPR interference system for engineering biological nitrogen fixation. MSystems, 9(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.00155-24
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