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Raman spectroscopy detects phenotypic differences among Escherichia coli enriched for 1‐butanol tolerance using a metagenomic DNA library
Authors:Benjamin G Freedman  Theresah N K Zu  Robert S Wallace  Ryan S Senger
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological Systems Engineering;2. Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA
Abstract:Advances in Raman spectroscopy are enabling more comprehensive measurement of microbial cell chemical composition. Advantages include results returned in near real‐time and minimal sample preparation. In this research, Raman spectroscopy is used to analyze E. coli with engineered solvent tolerance, which is a multi‐genic trait associated with complex and uncharacterized phenotypes that are of value to industrial microbiology. To generate solvent tolerant phenotypes, E. coli transformed with DNA libraries are serially enriched in the presence of 0.9% (v/v) and 1.1% (v/v) 1‐butanol. DNA libraries are created using degenerate oligonucleotide primed PCR (DOP‐PCR) from the genomic DNA of E. coli, Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824, and the metagenome of a stream bank soil sample, which contained DNA from 72 different phyla. DOP‐PCR enabled high efficiency library cloning (with no DNA shearing or end‐polishing) and the inclusion un‐culturable organisms. Nine strains with improved tolerance are analyzed by Raman spectroscopy and vastly different solvent‐tolerant phenotypes are characterized. Common among these are improved membrane rigidity from increasing the fraction of unsaturated fatty acids at the expense of cyclopropane fatty acids. Raman spectroscopy offers the ability to monitor cell phenotype changes in near real‐time and is adaptable to high‐throughput screening, making it relevant to metabolic engineering.
Keywords:Chemometric Fingerprinting  DOP‐PCR  Genomic DNA Libraries  Raman Spectroscopy  Solvent Tolerance
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