Biotechnology and Bioengineering

Genome‐Scale Community Model‐Guided Development of Bacterial Coculture for Lignocellulose Bioconversion

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-01-05
scimago Q2
wos Q2
SJR0.811
CiteScore7.9
Impact factor3.5
ISSN00063592, 10970290
Abstract
ABSTRACT

Microbial communities have shown promising potential in degrading complex biopolymers, producing value‐added products through collaborative metabolic functionality. Hence, developing synthetic microbial consortia has become a predominant technique for various biotechnological applications. However, diverse microbial entities in a consortium can engage in distinct biochemical interactions that pose challenges in developing mutualistic communities. Therefore, a systems‐level understanding of the inter‐microbial metabolic interactions, growth compatibility, and metabolic synergisms is essential for developing effective synthetic consortia. This study demonstrated a genome‐scale community modeling approach to assess the inter‐microbial interaction pattern and screen metabolically compatible bacterial pairs for designing the lignocellulolytic coculture system. Here, we have investigated the pairwise growth and biochemical synergisms among six termite gut bacterial isolates by implementing flux‐based parameters, i.e., pairwise growth support index (PGSI) and metabolic assistance (PMA). Assessment of the PGSI and PMA helps screen nine beneficial bacterial pairs that were validated by designing a coculture experiment with lignocellulosic substrates. For the cocultured bacterial pairs, the experimentally measured enzymatic synergisms (DES) showed good coherence with model‐derived biochemical compatibility (PMA), which explains the fidelity of the in silico predictions. The highest degree of enzymatic synergisms has been observed in C. denverensis P3 and Brevibacterium sp P5 coculture, where the total cellulase activity has been increased by 53%. Hence, the flux‐based assessment of inter‐microbial interactions and metabolic compatibility helps select the best bacterial coculture system with enhanced lignocellulolytic functionality. The flux‐based parameters (PGSI and PMA) in the proposed community modeling strategy will help optimize the composition of microbial consortia for developing synthetic microcosms for bioremediation, bioengineering, and biomedical applications.

Found 

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex
Found error?