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Bacterial microcompartment‐directed polyphosphate kinase promotes stable polyphosphate accumulation in E. coli
Authors:Mingzhi Liang  Stefanie Frank  Heinrich Lünsdorf  Martin J Warren  Michael B Prentice
Institution:1. Department of Microbiology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland;2. School of Biosciences, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, UK;3. Department of Biochemical Engineering, University College London, London, UK;4. Central Facility for Microscopy, Helmholtz Center of Infection Research, Braunschweig, Germany;5. Department of Pathology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland;6. APC Microbiome Institute, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
Abstract:Processes for the biological removal of phosphate from wastewater rely on temporary manipulation of bacterial polyphosphate levels by phased environmental stimuli. In E. coli polyphosphate levels are controlled via the polyphosphate‐synthesizing enzyme polyphosphate kinase (PPK1) and exopolyphosphatases (PPX and GPPA), and are temporarily enhanced by PPK1 overexpression and reduced by PPX overexpression. We hypothesised that partitioning PPK1 from cytoplasmic exopolyphosphatases would increase and stabilise E. coli polyphosphate levels. Partitioning was achieved by co‐expression of E. coli PPK1 fused with a microcompartment‐targeting sequence and an artificial operon of Citrobacter freundii bacterial microcompartment genes. Encapsulation of targeted PPK1 resulted in persistent phosphate uptake and stably increased cellular polyphosphate levels throughout cell growth and into the stationary phase, while PPK1 overexpression alone produced temporary polyphosphate increase and phosphate uptake. Targeted PPK1 increased polyphosphate in microcompartments 8‐fold compared with non‐targeted PPK1. Co‐expression of PPX polyphosphatase with targeted PPK1 had little effect on elevated cellular polyphosphate levels because microcompartments retained polyphosphate. Co‐expression of PPX with non‐targeted PPK1 reduced cellular polyphosphate levels. Thus, subcellular compartmentalisation of a polymerising enzyme sequesters metabolic products from competing catabolism by preventing catabolic enzyme access. Specific application of this process to polyphosphate is of potential application for biological phosphate removal.
Keywords:Bacteria  Biopolymers  Metabolic engineering  Microreactors  Synthetic biology
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