Phage-Assisted Evolution of Bacillus methanolicus Methanol Dehydrogenase 2

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Abstract

Synthetic methylotrophy, the modification of organisms such as E. coli to grow on methanol, is a longstanding goal of metabolic engineering and synthetic biology. The poor kinetic properties of NAD-dependent methanol dehydrogenase, the first enzyme in most methanol assimilation pathways, limit pathway flux and present a formidable challenge to synthetic methylotrophy. To address this bottleneck, we used a formaldehyde biosensor to develop a phage-assisted noncontinuous evolution (PANCE) selection for variants of Bacillus methanolicus methanol dehydrogenase 2 (Bm Mdh2). Using this selection, we evolved Mdh2 variants with up to 3.5-fold improved Vmax. The mutations responsible for enhanced activity map to the predicted active site region homologous to that of type III iron-dependent alcohol dehydrogenases, suggesting a new critical region for future methanol dehydrogenase engineering strategies. Evolved Mdh2 variants enable twice as much 13C-methanol assimilation into central metabolites than previously reported state-of-the-art methanol dehydrogenases. This work provides improved Mdh2 variants and establishes a laboratory evolution approach for metabolic pathways in bacterial cells.

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Roth, T. B., Woolston, B. M., Stephanopoulos, G., & Liu, D. R. (2019). Phage-Assisted Evolution of Bacillus methanolicus Methanol Dehydrogenase 2. ACS Synthetic Biology, 8(4), 796–806. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.8b00481

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