2017 Annual Meeting
(674e) Engineered Biofilms for Isobutanol Production: In silico Modeling of a Two-Species Bacterial Community
Authors
Our long-term goal is to engineer a biofilm community for conversion of cellulose to the second generation liquid fuel isobutanol. As a first step towards this goal, we have developed a biofilm metabolic model of a two-species system comprised of the facultative sugar utilizer Escherichia coli engineered for aerobic isobutanol synthesis and the anaerobic organic acid oxidizer/iron(III) reducer Geobacter metallireducens. Glucose and oxygen are supplied at the top of the biofilm to support E. coli growth and isobutanol synthesis. Organic acids and iron(III) are supplied at the bottom of the biofilm to support Geobacter metallireducens growth and mimic organic acid (acetate, ethanol) synthesis by unmodeled cellulose degraders. Our model predicts that the two species will spatially organize along gradients of the electron donors and acceptors. E. coli located in the aerobic region synthesizes isobutanol and acetate, which diffuses into anaerobic region where the acetate is consumed by G. metallireducens. We predict that the E. coli-G. metallireducens biofilm community will produce higher levels of isobutanol than E. coli alone due to G. metallireducens detoxification of environment. This result holds even when G. metallireducens only consumes acetate produced by E. coli, suggesting that the two species biofilm community may serve as a modular platform for development of more complex biofuel producing systems.