Adaptive Evolution in Producing Microtiter Cultivations Generates Genetically Stable Escherichia coli Production Hosts for Continuous Bioprocessing

Biotechnol J. 2021 Mar;16(3):e2000376. doi: 10.1002/biot.202000376. Epub 2020 Nov 9.

Abstract

The production of recombinant proteins usually reduces cell fitness and the growth rate of producing cells. The growth disadvantage favors faster-growing non-producer mutants. Therefore, continuous bioprocessing is hardly feasible in Escherichia coli due to the high escape rate. The stability of E. coli expression systems under long-term production conditions and how metabolic load triggered by recombinant gene expression influences the characteristics of mutations are investigated. Iterated fed-batch-like microbioreactor cultivations are conducted under production conditions. The easy-to-produce green fluorescent protein (GFP) and a challenging antigen-binding fragment (Fab) are used as model proteins, and BL21(DE3) and BL21Q strains as expression hosts. In comparative whole-genome sequencing analyses, mutations that allowed cells to grow unhindered despite recombinant protein production are identified. A T7 RNA polymerase expression system is only conditionally suitable for long-term cultivation under production conditions. Mutations leading to non-producers occur in either the T7 RNA polymerase gene or the T7 promoter. The host RNA polymerase-based BL21Q expression system remains stable in the production of GFP in long-term cultivations. For the production of Fab, mutations in lacI of the BL21Q derivatives have positive effects on long-term stability. The results indicate that adaptive evolution carried out with genome-integrated E. coli expression systems in microtiter cultivations under industrial-relevant production conditions is an efficient strain development tool for production hosts.

Keywords: E. coli; Fab fragments; adaptive evolution; challenging proteins; chemostat cultivation; genetic stability; long-term stability.

MeSH terms

  • Escherichia coli* / genetics
  • Green Fluorescent Proteins / genetics
  • Promoter Regions, Genetic / genetics
  • Recombinant Proteins / genetics

Substances

  • Recombinant Proteins
  • Green Fluorescent Proteins