Team:Yale
From 2013.igem.org
Engineering a factory for plastics in E. coliSynthetic biology will allow firms to produce industrially important compounds more cheaply and sustainably by leveraging the efficiency of naturally-occurring and artificially-enhanced biochemical pathways. We take the first step in realizing this goal for a widely used plastic, poly(lactic acid), or PLA, by engineering a strain of E. coli for its synthesis. We chose PLA for its particularly useful combination of material properties:
Unfortunately, conventional methods of synthesizing PLA chemically are quite expensive: one gram of pure PLA costs around $90. Moreover, even though it is mostly manufactured from corn, the processing and purifying steps use many chemicals that are environmentally unfriendly. Recently, researchers have genetically engineered E. coli to produce PLA, but at low yields and at insufficiently long chain lengths for commercial use. We propose using multiplex automated genome engineering (MAGE) to improve both the yield and chain length of biosynthesized PLA. MAGE is recombineering on steroids: it takes advantage of the λ Red recombination proteins to increase the efficiency of mutation rate. Instead of laboriously targeting sites one-by-one, many areas of the genome are targeted in parallel. By repeating the procedure numerous times, an incredible amount of diversity can be created in a relatively short amount of time, and from that diversity strains displaying increased product yield can be selected. | ||