Harnessing photoenzymatic reactions for unnatural biosynthesis in microorganisms

PRODUCTS USED

Genes
Read Full Article

ABSTRACT

Photobiocatalysis provides a powerful strategy for integrating light and biological catalysts to drive abiological transformations. However, its scalability is hindered by high enzyme loading, reliance on costly cofactors and instability under radical-generating conditions. Here we report the integration of light-driven enzymatic reactions into the cellular metabolism of Escherichia coli, bridging flavin-based photobiocatalysis with biosynthesis. Using synthetic biology strategies, we engineered microbial cells to continuously produce olefin substrates and ene-reductase while regenerating cofactors directly from glucose. By externally supplying radical precursors or introducing synthetic pathways for their in situ production, we enabled fermentation-based microbial photobiosynthesis, achieving high titres and demonstrating feasibility for scale-up in a bioreactor. This approach extends photobiocatalysis from in vitro applications to in vivo semi- and complete biosynthesis, revealing its full potential for integrating light-driven reactions into cellular metabolism.

Read Full Article

PRODUCTS USED

Genes