TaCo Pathway described on Nature Catalysis

Another important milestone for the project has been published in the journal Nature Catalysis, in a paper that describes one of the promising pathways developed in FutureAgriculture to bypass the photorespiration.

The team led by Tobias Erb from the Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology has developed a synthetic photorespiratory bypass that represents an alternative to natural photorespiration. Together with the Consortium, the Erb’s lab has designed the so-called tartronyl-CoA (TaCo) pathway that is much shorter than natural photorespiration and requires only 5 instead of 11 enzymes. The perhaps greatest benefit of the TaCo pathway is that it fixes CO2 instead of releasing it, as it happens in natural photorespiration. As a result, the TaCo pathway is more energy-efficient than any other proposed photorespiratory bypass to date.

Engineering of glycolyl-CoA carboxylase (GCC), the key enzyme of the TaCo pathway. GCC was developed on the scaffold of a naturally occurring propionyl-CoA carboxylase (WT). Rational design led to the 50-times improved version M3, and additional high-throughput screening enabled the identification of a 900-fold improved version (M5). © Max Planck Institute for terrestrial Microbiology/Scheffen

Building the TaCo pathway was a scientific journey that has led the researchers from the computational model through enzymatic engineering, microfluidic high-throughut screening, cryo-EM-technology towards the successful in vitro implementation of a new-to-nature metabolic connection that opens up new possibilities for CO2 fixation and the production of value-added compounds. “The main challenge in realizing the TaCo pathway was to find all the required enzymes,” Marieke Scheffen, Postdoctoral researcher in Tobias Erb`s group and lead author of the study, recalls. “It meant that we had to look for enzymes that perform similar reactions and then “teach” them to perform the desired reaction.”

For more information please check the original news by MPI and the scientific paper.

Reference:

Scheffen, M.; Marchal, D.G.; Beneyton, T.; Schuller, S.K.;  Klose, M.; Diehl, C.; Lehmann, J.; Pfister, P.; Carrillo, M.; He, H.; Aslan, S.; Cortina, N.S.; Claus, P.; Bollschweiler, D.; Baret, J.-C.; Schuller, J.M.; Zarzycki,J.; Bar-Even, A.; Erb, T.J.
A new-to-nature carboxylation module to improve natural and synthetic CO2 fixation
Nature Catalysis 1 (2021)

 

 

Plants expressing synthetic routes

Arabidopsis thaliana
Brachypodium distachyon

Evogene succeeded to introduce the two of the most promising pathways into model plants, Arabidopsis thaliana and Brachypodium distachyon. They obtained three independent events expressing all five proteins of Pathwa01 in Arabidopsis plants. Those three positive events and additional events harboring and expressing the partial pathway (used as controls) were all taken for greenhouse assay. The preliminary results of this assay show that the expression of these specific proteins is affecting the biomass production and photosynthetic activity of Arabidopsis plants. Thus, it is suggested that for expression in Arabidopsis the Pathway01 might be optimized, focusing on one of the proteins involved.

As for the second pathway, Pathway02, in both Arabidopsis and Brachypodium species, as well as the Pathway01 in Brachypodium, cloning, transformation, seed propagation and molecular evaluation phases were also completed. Expression evaluations and phenotyping of the most suitable events are expected to be completed during 2020.

Synthetic pathways in cyanobacteria

Three synthetic photorespiratory pathways were implemented by the team at Imperial College London in wild-type and mutant cyanobacteria.

To verify that the synthetic pathways are functioning, we seek evidence regarding (1) the physical presence of the introduced pathway parts (i.e. proteins), (2) the functionality of the introduced parts (i.e. enzyme activity) and (3) impact of the introduced pathway on overall cyanobacteria metabolism.

Phenotype of engineered strains under varying environmental conditions.Healthy growing cyanobacteria are green to black, depending on the density. Yellow or transparent colour indicates unhealthy.

Analysis of the phenotype and proteome of these strains lead to the conclusion that two of the synthetic pathways are capable of rescuing mutants with compromised native photorespiratory metabolism or by improving growth under particularly compromised environmental conditions. Hence, we conclude that these synthetic pathways are functioning in cyanobacteria. This will enable the synthetic photorespiration pathways to be functionally tested in a photosynthetic organism, facilitating the preparation and optimization of the same synthetic photorespiration pathways in terrestrial agriculturally important plants.

 

 

Design and engineering of E. coli metabolic sensor strains

Microbial biosensors exploit genetically engineered microorganisms to detect the presence of target chemicals. Usually, they are based on the screening of a large library of enzyme or pathway variants in order to identify those that can efficiently generate or detect the desired compound. Such high-throughput screening can be challenging, especially if the tested library is very large.

To address this limitation, the FutureAgriculture team at the MPI-MP proposes the use of metabolic sensor strains which link the bacterial growth to the presence of the relevant compound, thus replacing screening with direct selection. Their method is based on strains with a series of gene-deletions; each strain displays a different dependency on the relevant compound to support growth. In this way, the growth phenotype of the different strains can be used to accurately estimate the availability of the target compound.

In order to design the most suitable metabolic sensor strains, the team at MPI-MP has developed a computational platform that, based on flux coupling, identifies the growth requirement of several combinations of gene deletions.

As a first application, they designed a set of E. coli sensor strains for glycerate – as this compound is one of the key expected metabolic products of the FutureAgriculture pathways.

They constructed several strains, in which glycerate serves as a carbon source for a different fraction of cellular biomass: in each strain, a different set of enzymes is disrupted such that central metabolism is effectively dissected into multiple segments.

The experimentally measured glycerate dependencies on the strains were found to almost perfectly match predicted values, thus confirming the validity of the computational platform. Moreover, they showed that this method can be used to accurately detect a compound concentration across two orders of magnitude. The glycerate biosensors also reveal key phenomena in central metabolism, such as the spontaneous degradation of central metabolites and the importance of metabolic sinks for balancing small metabolic networks. Such valuable information is now used to optimize the pathway design in FutureAgriculture.

The glycolate reduction module

The synthetic carbon-neutral pathways share a common element: the glycolate reduction module, which is composed of two novel reactions to reduce glycolate to glycolaldehyde. In the paper, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, we describe how they experimentally realized a carbon-neutral shunt by engineering the enzymatic activities needed for these two new-to-nature reactions.

By means of computational design and directed evolution we engineered:

  • A glycolyl-CoA synthetase starting from on an acetyl-CoA synthetase. Based on the speculation that the coliacetyl-CoA synthetase (EcACS) may also accept glycolate, we tested and confirmed its ability to ligate glycolate to CoA with a low catalytic efficiency. We subsequently applied computational design to engineer a higher glycolyl-CoA and lower ACS efficiency. The resulting enzyme (ACS19), compared with the starting EcACS, has more than 60 point-mutations and resulted in approximately a 16-fold shift in favor of glycolate.
  • A glycolyl-CoA reductase starting from a propionyl-CoA reductase. The Rhodopseudomonas palustrispropanediol utilization protein (RpPduP) shows promiscuous activity with acetyl-CoA and other CoA-ester substrates. The FutureAgriculture team used a combination of structure-based design and high-throughput screening to select the right variant that shows an enhanced selectivity for glycolyl-CoA and the ability to use NADPH over NAD+, thereby favoring reduction over oxidation. This variant, named GCR exhibits NADPH-preference as well as ∼12-fold improved selectivity for glycolyl-CoA over acetyl-CoA compared with wild-type RpPduP.

Figure1. Point mutations implemented to the selected enzymes in order to enhance their desired activity. From right to left: ACS19 superimposed to EcACS and GCR to RpPduP.

We further examined whether the combination of the two engineered enzymes could efficiently convert glycolate to glycolaldehyde. When ACS19 was combined with GCR, glycolate was efficiently reduced to glycolaldehyde without substential inhibition by NAD+. Engineered ACS19 and GCR, therefore, comprised a successful glycolate reduction module.

This module was then combined with three existing enzymes (EcFsaA-EcKdsD-RsPRK) to convert glycolate to RuBP, thus providing a proof of principle for the carbon-conserving A5P photorespiration bypass. We were able to produce RuBP from glycolate with an overall turnover rate of 0.05/s per enzyme for the entire pathway. The rate of glycolate reduction as measured by NADPH consumption matched the rate of RuBP production, indicating a tight coupling between the reduction and condensation modules, with no waste of reducing potential or off-target reactions in this in vitro setup. Such in vitro realization of a carbon-conserving pathway, as provided in this study, provides the foundation for its realization in photosynthetic organisms.

 

The most promising pathways

The planned in silico part of the project has been accomplished. By defining specific reaction rules, we systematically identified promising routes that assimilate 2-phosphoglycolate into the Calvin Cycle without carbon loss. We further developed a kinetic–stoichiometric model showing that the identified pathways could potentially enhance carbon fixation rate across the physiological range of irradiation and CO2, even if most of their enzymes operate at low activity. Therefore, we show the potential to significantly boost plant productivity. The computational modeling is described in depth in this publication.

From this analysis, we identified two groups of promising synthetic photorespiration bypasses.

The first group consists of carbon-neutral pathways in which glycolate is reduced to glycolaldehyde (A–D in Figure 1). These synthetic pathways share a “glycolate reduction module” composed of two novel reactions (brown arrows and yellow shading). As an alternative pathway, the tartronyl-CoA (TrCoA) shunt (E in Figure 1) is carbon positive, that is, it relies on a carboxylation step, thereby directly supporting the activity of the Calvin Cycle. The TrCoA shunt requires the engineering of three novel reactions (blue arrows).

In the framework of FutureAgriculture, two of these promising pathways (TrCoAand arabinose 5-phosphate Ar5P pathways) have been successfully reconstructed in vitro, meaning that (i) all the necessary enzymes have been identified or engineered to perform the desired activity and (ii) the purified enzymes were mixed and demonstrated to work together to convert glycolate into an intermediate of the Calvin Cycle. We now face the challenge of implementing and optimizing pathway activity in vivo.

The in vivo pathway implementation is still underway and most of the work have been performed using the carbon-positive TrCoA and the carbon-neutral erythrulose pathway. We have further successfully introduced the two pathways in cyanobacteria, where they seem to be beneficial for the organism growth under certain conditions.

In the meantime, everything has been set for the synthetic pathway introduction in the model plants Arabidopsis and Brachypodium. Preliminary results are only available for the TrCoA pathway in Arabidopsis, where it didn’t show any significant physiological or phenotypic advantage compared to the wild type, both under stress and non-stress conditions. Therefore, the FutureAgriculture team is busy reviewing the pattern of expression utilized in Arabidopsis and collecting several insights that might lead to the pathway optimization. More experimental validation and phenotyping is currently under development for other transgenic plants. For the erythrulose pathway, potential growth retardation and in planta toxicity have been found in leaf- disk and seedling assays, therefore several mitigation actions are tested to avoid detrimental impact on plants.

See them growing!

Evogene is currently growing and testing the FutureAgriculture plants in its greenhouses under two conditions (normal and drought) with the final aim of validating their growth-advantage.

To evaluate the pathways in vivo, scientists at Evogene have established a set of molecular and phenotypic experiments.  Molecular parameters are tested to ensure the presence of the FutureAgriculture pathway inside the plant’s DNA and its correct expression. Phenotypic parameters are monitored to check the health and growth of the plant, e.g its general appearance, the efficiency of the photosynthetic systems, the biomass, etc.

The results obtained from previous stages of FutureAgriculture were essential for the selection and optimization of potential pathways to be inserted into higher plants. However, higher plants are more complex and differ from the bacteria used until now (E. coli and cyanobacteria). The preceding tests gave a general direction as for what to expect in the engineered plants; therefore, the whole Consortium is eager to see them growing.

Gene transfer into plants: exploiting a pathogenic machinery

In FutureAgriculture, Evogene is responsible for the pathway implementation in higher plants and phenotype characterization. First, they have selected the best sequences to implement the new pathways in vivo based on the results obtained by the other FutureAgriculture partners in silico and in vitro.

Then, in order to insert the necessary components into plants, Evogene takes advantage of the pathogenic machinery of Agrobacterium tumefaciens (A. tumefaciens). In nature, A. tumefaciens is a bacterium responsible for the crown gall disease in many dicot plants: a small segment of its plasmid DNA moves from the bacterium cell into the plant genome and causes the disease. Scientists have succeeded in deactivating the pathogenic machinery and use it to insert desired DNA pieces into dicot plants instead, and later into monocot plants too. The sophisticated machinery of A. tumefaciens is the basis of many scientific studies carried out today in plants as well as of Evogene’s ability at FutureAgriculture to transfer the new metabolic pathway genes into the model plants.

 

The long-standing experience of Evogene with plant transformation has allowed them to precisely calibrate many parameters, thus mitigating potential difficulties. In the case of B. distachyon, Evogene has even developed unique proprietary transformation protocols for high throughput gene screening.

Nevertheless, some unexpected challenges can still occur during the process. Sometimes even if the gene is correctly transferred into the plant and enters its genome, it doesn’t get expressed, meaning that the plant has silenced it for some unknown reasons. Other difficulties are related to low transformation rates, but internal know-how helps to solve them.

Even if no obstacles arise during the process, it still takes several months from the initial transformation to the first results on the pathway performance in planta. The process takes more time in B. distachyon (up to one year), comparing to A. thaliana (up to six months), due to the transformation method.

Model plants can take us one step closer to better yield productive crop plants.

In FutureAgriculture, Evogene has chosen to work with two different model plants; Arabidopsis thaliana (A. thaliana) and Brachypodium distachyon (B. distachyon). Together they represent two major types of crop plants: A. thaliana is a model for widespread dicot crops like soybean, tomato, potato, lentil and peanut; whereas, B. distachyon for important monocot crops such as rice, corn, wheat, barley and oat.

Similarly, to animal models, model plants are an ideal ground for testing initial hypothesis rapidly and with high certainty. Compared to crop plants, they are characterized with shorter life cycles, smaller-sized plants and a simpler genome; all features that speed up and simplify the scientific process. Indeed, working with model plants allows scientists to perform a large number of experiments at a relatively low cost while gaining valuable knowledge and process understanding before moving to more complex crop plants.

Another powerful tool of A. thaliana and B. distachyon, is their known genetics. A. thaliana was the first plant genome to be fully sequenced (and the third multicellular organism). Ten years later, in 2010, the genome of B. distachyon – double of the size of A.thaliana’s genome – has been sequenced and published. The knowledge of the plant DNA is a fundamental prerequisite for the success of the FutureAgriculture project as it encodes useful information on the metabolic pathways. The pathways selected in FutureAgriculture are composed both from bacteria genetically modified enzymes as well as plant native ones. Without knowing the enzymes involved in the native network of the plant, it would have been almost impossible to establish a new pathway there. Through new discoveries and insights from the model plants we can take one step closer to better yield productive crop plants.

The challenges of introducing the synthetic pathway into cyanbacteria

Introducing new genes into cyanobacteria is quicker than into plants but not as quick as one might expect. For example, the bacteria E. coli can be transformed overnight. The same process for cyanobacteria takes up to 1 month, instead. Its timing is extended because cyanobacteria are polyploid – they have multiple copies of their genome – and a process called segregation needs to happen to ensure that the new DNA propagates in all the copies.

Further care is needed when introducing a complex pathway in cyanobacteria: “We can’t introduce all the necessary genes at once, as there are too many,” explains Patrik, “Therefore, we do it in a stepwise manner: we start from a group of enzymes that operates at the end of the pathway and move forward”. This trick avoids the production of potentially harmful intermediates that otherwise could impair cell growth. “After one month of waiting, there are still chances that the strain rejects the new DNA and we might have to start all-over” warns Patrik, “Still, this method is way faster than the several months needed to generate an engineered plant”.

Evaluate the synthetic photorespiration pathways in vivo

FutureAgriculture uses cyanobacteria to evaluate the in vivo behaviour of the synthetic photorespiration pathways. Their quick life-cycle and simpler compartmentalisation make cyanobacteria an ideal model organism to work with before moving into plants.

At the laboratory of Patrik Jones at the Imperial College London, scientists evaluate the pathways in a very comprehensive way, addressing their impact on carbon fluxes, metabolism and cell growth: “We study the carbon flux by following the journey inside the cell of carbon atoms taken up during photosynthesis. The CO2 absorbed by the cell contains the carbon isotope 13C, distinguishable in our analytical machines over time. After only 20 seconds we are ready to follow the isotope through its metabolic steps in the natural and synthetic pathway.”

The technique is not trivial as the resulting data need an elaborate computational analysis to be interpreted correctly. But it helps to assess if and how the synthetic pathways are replacing the natural photorespiration pathways, and it might even provide some answers on the role of natural photorespiration.

Cyanobacteria: who are they?

Who would have known that a tiny unnoticeable organism as a bacterium would be the father of photosynthesis? Plants have taken their ability to convert solar energy into chemical energy from cyanobacterial-like organisms, which ultimately became the chloroplasts in plant cells. Today, cyanobacteria, sometimes referred to as prokaryotic algae, live in a wide variety of environments: moist soils, seawater and lakes, and they still retain the ability to perform photosynthesis. Actually, their efficiency per area of land is even higher than plants.

Like plants, cyanobacteria carry out the detoxifying process called photorespiration to recycle 2-phosphoglycolate (2PG), the toxic side-product of carbon fixation. Unlike plants, they have not one but three photorespiration pathways. “This is quite surprising,” explains Patrik Jones from the Imperial College London, “Cyanobacteria have already a carbon concertation mechanism that elevates the amount of CO2 near the active site of Rubisco.” This strategy should minimize the need for photorespiration, since, if Rubisco has better access to CO2, the production of 2PG is lowered. “It is commonly thought that photorespiration is negligible in cyanobacteria. However, when cyanobacteria lose the ability to carry it out, their growth is impaired.” Indeed, as part of the FA studies, the Jones group is also trying to further our understanding of photorespiration in cyanobacteria.

Patrik’s lab uses cyanobacteria as a tool to evaluate the synthetic pathways developed within the FutureAgriculture project and that have been designed to increase the yield of crop plants. “If we could improve the growth of cyanobacteria as well, this would also have positive consequences, as we might even rely directly on them for food” suggests Patrik. “They are extremely good in making proteins: in some strains, proteins account for more than 50% of their dry weight. Few food-sources can boast such a high protein content.” Actually, we already eat cyanobacteria – one example for all, the super-food Spirulina. Get ready, soon cyanobacteria might be part of our diet.

High-throughput improvements

So far, to improve enzyme efficiency only the active site has been taken into account. However, parts that are far away from the active site can still affect the reaction. The further away from the active site, the less predictable it is what will happen by modifying that part and therefore the rational thinking alone won’t help much anymore. The FutureAgriculture team is now using high-throughput mutagenesis to expand the modifications and cover the entire structure of the enzyme.

Lately, some 10.000 variants of the same enzyme have been created and are currently analysed thanks to a novel high throughput method established in collaboration with external partners in Bordeaux that are not part of the consortium. The method consists in creating very small droplets, in the order of 50 picoliters, containing several thousand copies of a modified enzyme. The enzyme activity in the droplets is then tested very quickly with lasers: 200 droplets are processed per second – which means that in only 5 minutes 60.000 enzyme variants can be tested!

This droplet screening method developed some years ago, relies mainly on sensitive instruments with custom setups adapted to each system. To that end the partners at MPI-TM teamed up with Jean-Christoph Baret at the University of Bordeaux who is an expert in placing the enzymes in small droplets, sorting the good drops from the bad ones and assaying the enzyme activity.

As explains Tobias Erb “Among the variants that we are currently testing we are hoping to find a faster and more specific variant of the key-enzyme of the carbon positive pathway, a new CO2 fixing enzyme.  Once we find an improved version, we are going to test it again in the in vitro metabolism and hopefully, it will improve the plant metabolism even more.“

Building a winning team of enzymes

Once identified the best enzymes, it’s time to study them in their context: the carbon positive CO2 fixation pathway. “We want to make sure the enzyme can work well as a team. It’s like in football, you might have great individual players but to score you need a good teamwork, too. Sometimes it makes sense to take out one of the best players and substitute with another option because it interacts better with the rest of the team” explains Tobias Erb (MPI-MP).

To test the interplay of the individual enzymes, the CO2 fixation pathway is first recreated in vitro: a small vessel containing all the ingredients necessary to the pathway i.e. the individual enzymes, the chemical energy (ATP) and its reducing equivalents (NADPH), other cofactors that help the enzyme to exert its function, and a buffer that mimics the cell environment.

The pathway performance is then quantified by measuring the variations in the concentration of the ingredients. This is done by using highly sensitive mass spectrometers that can accurately quantify the amounts of substrates, intermediates and other metabolites for all the reactions that are happening in the vessel.

The team of FutureAgriculture has already tested in vitro the effect of the newly designed pathway onto the CO2 fixing-machinery of the plant. The outcome was extremely encouraging as the pathway showed a beneficial effect on the plant metabolism. This is the very first proof of principle that the pathway is able to improve plant metabolism in the lab condition, and that the pathway if transplanted in vivo has the potential to positively affect plant growth.

Making enzymes more efficient

“It’s not enough to find an enzyme that can perform a reaction; the enzyme needs to be sufficiently active too” explains Tobias Erb, group leader and director of the MPI-TM in Marburg.
That’s why the partners at the Weizmann Institute and MPI-TM have worked hard to improve the identified enzymes and make them more efficient.

The method used by Erb’s lab starts by looking at the crystal structure of the enzyme – a 3D dimensional model with the position of the atoms. On that model point mutations can be made, usually by modifying the amino acids in active site – where the reaction takes place – to have a positive effect on the enzyme’s efficiency. The changes are not random but according to the scientist’s chemical logic and rational thinking. Two outcomes are important to be achieved:

  • A fast enzyme: The faster the enzymes the higher will be the impact on plant growth. If the speed of the enzyme reactions is high then the metabolism of the plant will be very active and can operate with high CO2 fixation efficiency. Thanks to the computer modelling of the photosynthesis developed by the partner at MPI-MP (LINK), the threshold of activity that needs to be reached to ensure high efficiency is well-known.
  • An accurate enzyme: The enzyme needs also to be as accurate as possible, which means that it should not have side-reactions. Such side-reaction might be toxic or slow down the metabolism and ultimately affect the plant growth negatively.

Once a set of mutation is decided, the mutations are implemented on the enzyme and their performance is tested in the lab. In Tobias Erb’s words “we try to make sure that the modelling is actually happening, that it becomes real” and therefore there is a lot of trial and error and back and forth, from the model to the experiments. Following this process, the FutureAgriculture team has found all the efficient enzymes necessary to complete a new pathway – the so-called “carbon positive pathway” – that should stimulate CO2 fixation in the plant and increase growth yield. Now it’s time to see how the individual enzymes work together.

2018 Otto Bayer Award goes to Dr. Tobias Erb

Our partner, Tobias Erb from the Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology have been awarded the prestigious Otto Bayer Award for his outstanding contributions in the field of “Synthetic biology, especially the application on artificial photosynthesis”.  Part of this research is contributing to FutureAgriculture –  the group of Tobias Erb is responsible for the in vitro tests of the enzymes. You can read more in the official press release.

The official video to be released soon

We are currently collaborating with MedioMix to create the official video for FutureAgriculture! The first shooting day was at the MPI-MP in Potsdam – it has been a long day among laboratories, greenhouses and finding the right location for interviews. The official video for FutureAgriculture will be released soon, in the meantime, you can check our other videos on the dedicated YouTube Channel.

1948 Unbound @ HKW, Berlin

Unleashing the technical present / Nov 30 – Dec 02. Researchers & artists met for this experimental conference in order to explore the meaning and implications of the technosphere. Arren Bar-Even was invited to the SEEDS session – watch the full performance here.

KLAS Workshop

Our project coordinator got the chance to interact with artists and scientists on the topic “ESTHETICS get SYNTHETIC: Knowledge Link Through Art & Science” during the workshop organized by KLAS at the Max Planck Campus in Potsdam-Golm on the 27th – 28th of November 2017.

The workshop was an opportunity to bring together scholars and practitioners to jointly discuss and reflect on contents, approaches and methodologies that draw the link between synthetic biology and artistic research and how those can synergically interact by mutually interrogating and reconsidering their methodologies and modes of operation in an Artist in Residence program like KLAS,  in which Arren Bar-Even’s team participate as hosting laboratory.

Finalist place in the EU Innovation Radar Prize

One of our partners, the Max Plack Institute for Molecular Plant Physiology – MPI-MP, has been selected among the 4 finalists for the European Innovation Radar prize 2017 under the category Excellent Science. This category selects the best cutting-edge science underpinning tomorrow's technological advances. Thanks to this initiative, the FutureAgriculture's team got the chance to pitch their plans for going to market with their EU-funded tech to a jury of experts at the ICT Proposers' Day in Budapest (9 November 2017). More info here.

“It’s great you get recognition for your hard work and more importantly for your hard thinking,” says Arren Bar-Even, our project coordinator, of the finalist place and the ceremony in Budapest, "the Innovation Radar champions innovations with strong potential for transformative impacts developed during EU-funded research projects and it is a pleasure to be selected among them."

 

Arren Bar-Even, the project coordinator, during the pitch at the ICT Proposers' day in Budapest (9/11/17).

The multiple voices of the FutureAgriculture team!

We just released a new video – this time instead of the typical interview we decided to capture in few minutes the multiple voices of the FutureAgriculture team.  Each of us condensed the concept of FutureAgriculture in few words and the result is an extraordinary puzzle of points of view. A special thank to the greenhouse facility at the MPI in Marburg that hosted us for the shooting. We hope that you enjoy the video!

SIMULATING THE PLANT PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Our ability to test promising pathways in vitro and in vivo is quite limited. The testing of every candidate pathway would become an endless quest – worth of decades and billions of investments.  To select only a few promising pathways we need the support of computational models that predict how each pathway will affect the carbon fixation rate in plants. We have generated a model of plant photosynthesis that takes into account both the central carbon fixation pathway (the Calvin cycle) as well as the photorespiration pathway – either the natural pathway or a synthetic alternative route.

This model enables us to estimate which synthetic pathway will result in the highest enhancement of carbon fixation rate, under different conditions such high/low illumination or high/low CO2-availability due to the opening and closing of the stomata. Only the most promising pathways will undergo a more extensive testing in vitro and in vivo.

The model also feeds both the in vivo and in vitro testing by setting important parameters thresholds and by giving suggestions on how to reach them.  For example, the model can estimate the needed quantity of each pathway component to reach the best performance possible. Therefore it directs the enzyme engineering phase by specifying the minimal activity that an engineered enzyme needs to reach, or it warns us against toxic or reactive compounds that might accumulate during the activity of the pathway within the cells. We then can fine-tune the expression of the pathway components to avoid such deleterious accumulations.

The model is also continuously improved by integrating the data from the in vivo and in vitro testing i.e. the enzymatic activity, the growth rate, etc.  Models are not completely finished yet but they are already well productive in giving us valuable information regarding the expected pathway. They are expected to be fully operative during the 3rd year.

EVOLVING NEW TASKS

After the identification of the pathways, we need to make sure that all the pathways’ components are available. Our pathways involve both existing and novel reaction – reactions that are not known to be catalysed by any enzyme in nature. We engineer existing enzymes to catalyze such novel reactions in order to sustain the activity of the pathway.

First, we need to find existing enzymes in nature that catalyze similar reactions or that can catalyze the novel reactions promiscuously. The concept of promiscuous enzymes is fundamental for this phase: enzymes generally have evolved to catalyze one primary reaction that represents their main task, but promiscuous enzymes can also catalyze, besides the primary reaction, side-reactions at a lower rate.  During the 1st year of the project, we were able to identify the promiscuous enzymes that catalyze all the novel reactions of four of our candidate pathways, although the catalysis rate is quite low as expected.  However, they represent the starting seed for the second stage where we are going to enhance the low-rate reactions of interest by three methods:

  1. Rational design – by applying biochemical knowledge while looking at the enzyme active site and its structure, we can predict amino-acid residues substitutions in order for the enzyme to accept our substrate and support the novel reactions.
  2. Library of changes in protein sequences – By using a large collection of alteration in the protein sequence, we can systematically screen the changes that result in better activity. To easily identify the best change within the library we have designed in vitro assays that couples the target activity to a measurable property i.e. fluoresce.
  3. In vivo selection – by creating E. coli strains whose growth depends on the novel reactions, we can directly select for enzymes that catalyze it efficiently. Thanks to this method, we can directly select for higher enzymatic activity by simply selecting the cells that grow faster.

DESIGN OF CANDIDATE PATHWAYS

The backbone of our project is the identifications of novel pathways that increase agricultural productivity by enhancing carbon fixation rate and efficiency in plants. The pathway design was completed in the first year, during which we identified more than 100 candidate pathways that can potentially bypass the natural photorespiration without releasing CO2.

We have considered all known enzymes and all known enzymatic mechanism to systematically search for all the possible routes that recycle 2-phosphoglycolate, the product of Rubisco oxygenation, back to the Calvin cycles (that supports carbon fixation). Our candidate pathways contained both reactions catalyzed by existing enzymes as well as plausible reactions, i.e.  reactions that potentially can be catalyzed by well-characterized enzymes or that follow a well-known mechanism. We compared the candidate pathways according to various physicochemical properties including thermodynamics, kinetics, resources consumptions, and overlap with endogenous metabolism. Our analysis takes into account also how easy it will be to evolve the novel reactions from existing enzyme and mechanism (i.e. the number of novel enzymes required in the candidate pathway and hints in the scientific literature on existing enzymes that could support such new activity). This approach enabled us to select the most promising pathways in terms of such properties and test them in vitro, reconstructing the pathway from its enzymatic components. We are now implementing the pathways in E. coli, using it as a platform for the pathway selection, before finally moving to cyanobacteria and plants.