S58: Rational Design and Evolution of Cellulosic Biofuel Metabolism

Monday, July 25, 2011: 3:30 PM
Oak Alley, 4th fl (Sheraton New Orleans)
Friedrich Srienc, Chem. Eng. & Matl. Sci. and BioTechnology Institute, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
A metabolic network can be described by a set of elementary modes or pathways representing discrete metabolic states that support cell function. We have recently shown that in the most likely metabolic state the usage probability of individual elementary modes is distributed according to the Boltzmann distribution law while complying with the principle of maximum entropy production. To demonstrate that a metabolic network evolves towards such state we have carried out adaptive evolution experiments with Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum operating with a reduced metabolic functionality based on a reduced set of elementary modes. In such reduced metabolic network metabolic fluxes can be conveniently computed from the measured metabolite secretion pattern. Over a time span of 300 generations the specific growth rate of the strain continuously increased together with a continuous increase in the rate of entropy production. We show that the rate of entropy production asymptotically approaches the predicted maximum entropy production rate.   Moreover, from this state we can predict the genes that are mutated during the time course of evolution.