Thomas Eng,Deepanwita Banerjee,Javier Menasalvas,Yan Chen,Jennifer Gin,Hemant Choudhary,Edward E. K. Baidoo,Jian-Hua Chen,Axel Ekman,Ramu Kakumanu,Yuzhong Liu,Alex Codik,Carolyn A. Larabell,John M. Gladden,Blake A. Simmons,Jay D. Keasling,Christopher J. Petzold,Aindrila Mukhopadhyay
Maximizing the production of heterologous biomolecules is a complex problem that can be addressed with a systems-level understanding of cellular metabolism and regulation. Specifically, growth-coupling approaches can increase product titers and yields and also enhance production rates. However, implementing these methods for non-canonical carbon streams is challenging due to gaps in metabolic models. Over four design-build-test-learn cycles, we rewire Pseudomonas putida KT2440 for growth-coupled production of indigoidine from para-coumarate. We explore 4,114 potential growth-coupling solutions and refine one design through laboratory evolution and ensemble data-driven methods. The final growth-coupled strain produces 7.3 g/L indigoidine at 77% maximum theoretical yield in para-coumarate minimal medium. The iterative use of growth-coupling designs and functional genomics with experimental validation was highly effective and agnostic to specific hosts, carbon streams, and final products and thus generalizable across many systems.