Lian He’s research while affiliated with University of Washington and other places

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Publications (3)


Utilisation of low methane concentrations by methanotrophs
  • Chapter

May 2024

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15 Reads

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2 Citations

Lian He

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Mary E. Lidstrom

Figure 1. Schematic of formate reduction pathway and associated reactions. The proposed pathway reduces formate to formaldehyde via the enzymes ACS and ACDH, highlighted in red. A portion of the formate is oxidized by formate dehydrogenase (FDH) to generate the NADH needed for formyl-CoA reduction. To assimilate the formaldehyde into central metabolism and thereby support growth, the pathway is integrated into an organism which natively contains the RuMP pathway (as well as FDH). Formaldehyde could also in principle be assimilated via other pathways, such as those starting with formolase, glycolaldehyde synthase, glycolyl-CoA synthase, or a serine/threonine aldolase.
Figure 2. Screening natural ACS homologs identifies enzymes with formate activity. A) Lysate activity in E. coli for 41 ACS homologs versus their phylogeny. Activity is shown
Enzyme Engineering and in vivo Testing of a Formate-Reduction Pathway
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2021

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227 Reads

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14 Citations

Synthetic Biology

Jue Wang

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Karl Anderson

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Ellen Yang

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[...]

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Mary E Lidstrom

Formate is an attractive feedstock for sustainable microbial production of fuels and chemicals, but its potential is limited by the lack of efficient assimilation pathways. The reduction of formate to formaldehyde would allow efficient downstream assimilation, but no efficient enzymes are known for this transformation. To develop a 2-step formate-reduction pathway, we screened natural variants of acyl-CoA synthetase (ACS) and acylating aldehyde dehydrogenase (ACDH) for activity on one-carbon substrates and identified active and highly expressed homologs of both enzymes. We then performed directed evolution, increasing ACDH specific activity by 2.5-fold and ACS lysate activity by 5-fold. To test for in vivo activity of our pathway, we expressed it in a methylotroph which can natively assimilate formaldehyde. Although the enzymes were active in cell extracts, we could not detect formate assimilation into biomass, indicating that further improvement will be required for formatotrophy. Our work provides a foundation for further development of a versatile pathway for formate assimilation.

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Figure 3. Directed evolution of ACS improves expression and specificity, but not specific activity.
Enzyme engineering and in vivo testing of a formate-reduction pathway

February 2021

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37 Reads

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1 Citation

Formate is an attractive feedstock for sustainable microbial production of fuels and chemicals, but its potential is limited by the lack of efficient assimilation pathways. The reduction of formate to formaldehyde would allow efficient downstream assimilation, but no efficient enzymes are known for this transformation. To develop a 2-step formate-reduction pathway, we screened natural variants of acyl-CoA synthetase (ACS) and acylating aldehyde dehydrogenase (ACDH) for activity on one-carbon substrates and identified active and highly expressed homologs of both enzymes. We then performed directed evolution, increasing ACDH specific activity by 2.5-fold and ACS lysate activity by 5-fold. To test for in vivo activity of our pathway, we expressed it in a methylotroph which can natively assimilate formaldehyde. Although the enzymes were active in cell extracts, we could not detect formate assimilation into biomass, indicating that further improvement will be required for formatotrophy. Our work provides a foundation for further development of a versatile pathway for formate assimilation.

Citations (2)


... Two biological approaches using aerobic methanotrophs for capturing methane in the atmosphere have been suggested (He & Lidstrom, 2024): (i) bioreactors to capture methane in the air that is passed through them and which forms CO 2 and biomass and (ii) stimulation of methanotrophs in soil (e.g. landfill soil). ...

Reference:

Capturing methane with recombinant soluble methane monooxygenase and recombinant methyl‐coenzyme M reductase
Utilisation of low methane concentrations by methanotrophs
  • Citing Chapter
  • May 2024

... However, the use of CO2 and formate as feedstocks for common metabolic engineering chassis, such as Escherichia coli, has been limited by the low solubility of CO2 and high formate toxicity 6,7 . Novel approaches are needed to efficiently incorporate C1 feedstocks into biologically-accessible chemicals. ...

Enzyme Engineering and in vivo Testing of a Formate-Reduction Pathway

Synthetic Biology