Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
23198 Journal of Biotechnology 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Synthetic microbial communities can enable novel biotechnological processes.•Their design is inspired by microbial interactions in natural communities.•Metabolite cross-feeding is an essential element for synthetic communities.•Metabolic interdependencies and signaling can stabilize synthetic communities.•Spatial structuring can improve interaction processes in synthetic communities.

In their natural habitats microorganisms live in multi-species communities, in which the community members exhibit complex metabolic interactions. In contrast, biotechnological production processes catalyzed by microorganisms are usually carried out with single strains in pure cultures. A number of production processes, however, may be more efficiently catalyzed by the concerted action of microbial communities. This review will give an overview of organismic interactions between microbial cells and of biotechnological applications of microbial communities. It focuses on synthetic microbial communities that consist of microorganisms that have been genetically engineered. Design principles for such synthetic communities will be exemplified based on plausible scenarios for biotechnological production processes. These design principles comprise interspecific metabolic interactions via cross-feeding, regulation by interspecific signaling processes via metabolites and autoinducing signal molecules, and spatial structuring of synthetic microbial communities. In particular, the implementation of metabolic interdependencies, of positive feedback regulation and of inducible cell aggregation and biofilm formation will be outlined. Synthetic microbial communities constitute a viable extension of the biotechnological application of metabolically engineered single strains and enlarge the scope of microbial production processes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Bioengineering
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