posted on 2021-11-12, 20:38authored byVivianne
J. Goosens, Kenneth T. Walker, Silvia M. Aragon, Amritpal Singh, Vivek R. Senthivel, Linda Dekker, Joaquin Caro-Astorga, Marianne L. A. Buat, Wenzhe Song, Koon-Yang Lee, Tom Ellis
Bacteria
proficient at producing cellulose are an attractive synthetic
biology host for the emerging field of Engineered Living Materials
(ELMs). Species from the Komagataeibacter genus produce
high yields of pure cellulose materials in a short time with minimal
resources, and pioneering work has shown that genetic engineering
in these strains is possible and can be used to modify the material
and its production. To accelerate synthetic biology progress in these
bacteria, we introduce here the Komagataeibacter tool
kit (KTK), a standardized modular cloning system based on Golden Gate
DNA assembly that allows DNA parts to be combined to build complex
multigene constructs expressed in bacteria from plasmids. Working
in Komagataeibacter rhaeticus, we describe basic
parts for this system, including promoters, fusion tags, and reporter
proteins, before showcasing how the assembly system enables more complex
designs. Specifically, we use KTK cloning to reformat the Escherichia coli curli amyloid fiber system for functional
expression in K. rhaeticus, and go on to modify
it as a system for programming protein secretion from the cellulose
producing bacteria. With this toolkit, we aim to accelerate modular
synthetic biology in these bacteria, and enable more rapid progress
in the emerging ELMs community.