Computational design and analysis of modular cells for large libraries of exchangeable product synthesis modules

Metab Eng. 2021 Sep:67:453-463. doi: 10.1016/j.ymben.2021.07.009. Epub 2021 Jul 30.

Abstract

Microbial metabolism can be harnessed to produce a large library of useful chemicals from renewable resources such as plant biomass. However, it is laborious and expensive to create microbial biocatalysts to produce each new product. To tackle this challenge, we have recently developed modular cell (ModCell) design principles that enable rapid generation of production strains by assembling a modular (chassis) cell with exchangeable production modules to achieve overproduction of target molecules. Previous computational ModCell design methods are limited to analyze small libraries of around 20 products. In this study, we developed a new computational method, named ModCell-HPC, that can design modular cells for large libraries with hundreds of products with a highly-parallel and multi-objective evolutionary algorithm and enable us to elucidate modular design properties. We demonstrated ModCell-HPC to design Escherichia coli modular cells towards a library of 161 endogenous production modules. From these simulations, we identified E. coli modular cells with few genetic manipulations that can produce dozens of molecules in a growth-coupled manner with different types of fermentable sugars. These designs revealed key genetic manipulations at the chassis and module levels to accomplish versatile modular cells, involving not only in the removal of major by-products but also modification of branch points in the central metabolism. We further found that the effect of various sugar degradation on redox metabolism results in lower compatibility between a modular cell and production modules for growth on pentoses than hexoses. To better characterize the degree of compatibility, we developed a method to calculate the minimal set cover, identifying that only three modular cells are all needed to couple with all compatible production modules. By determining the unknown compatibility contribution metric, we further elucidated the design features that allow an existing modular cell to be re-purposed towards production of new molecules. Overall, ModCell-HPC is a useful tool for understanding modularity of biological systems and guiding more efficient and generalizable design of modular cells that help reduce research and development cost in biocatalysis.

Keywords: Compatibility; High performance computing; Island parallelization; Master-slave parallelization; ModCell; ModCell-HPC; Modular (chassis) cell; Modular cell design; Multiobjective evolutionary algorithm; Multiobjective optimization; Production modules.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms
  • Biocatalysis
  • Carbohydrate Metabolism
  • Escherichia coli* / genetics
  • Metabolic Engineering*