S150: An in silico Characterization of Microbial Electrosynthesis for Metabolic Engineering of Biochemicals

Wednesday, July 27, 2011: 10:00 AM
Nottoway, 4th fl (Sheraton New Orleans)
Aditya Vikram Pandit, Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada and Radakrishnan Mahadevan, Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
A critical concern in metabolic engineering is the need to balance the demand and supply of redox intermediates such as NADH.  Bioelectrochemical techniques offer a novel and promising method to alleviate redox imbalances during the synthesis of biochemicals and biofuels.  Broadly, these techniques reduce intracellular NAD+ to NADH and therefore manipulate the cell’s redox balance.  The cellular response to such redox changes and the additional reducing power available to the cell can be harnessed to produce desired metabolites.  In the context of microbial fermentation, these bioelectrochemical techniques can be used to improve product yields and/or productivity.  We have developed a method to characterize the role of bioelectrosynthesis in chemical production using the genome-scale metabolic model of E. coli.  The results elucidate the role of bioelectrosynthesis and its impact on biomass growth, cellular ATP yields and biochemical production.  The results also suggest that strain design strategies can change for fermentation processes that employ microbial electrosynthesis and suggest that dynamic operating strategies lead to maximizing productivity.  This analysis provides a systematic understanding of the benefits and limitations of bioelectrochemical techniques for biochemical production and highlight how electrical enhancement can impact cellular metabolism and biochemical production.