2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(312b) Amino Acid Cross-Feeding Enables Inter- and Intra-Species Cooperation (Industry Candidate)
We have quantified growth of 14 amino acid auxotrophs of E. coli and 6 amino acid auxotrophs of B. megaterium in both inter- and intra-species pairings. Cross-feeding success was evaluated in three different culture types: semi-solid agar plates, batch, and continuous culture. We observed that cross-feeding occurs both in both inter- and intra-species cross-feeding pairs of bacteria and identified pairs that cross-feed for inter- and intra-species pairs in all three culture types. Using this growth data we have identified two âsuper donorsâ, strains of both E. coli and B. megaterium that grow with many other amino acid auxotrophs in both inter- and intra-species pairs.
To characterize how the cells are responding to the co-culture environment and cross-feeding we generated gene expression profiles of three inter-species pairs of auxotrophs that cross-feed successfully in all three of our tested culture types. Supernatant and transcriptomic samples were taken from the cross-feeding pairs in continuous culture, as well as monocultures grown in a minimal media supplemented with their essential amino acid. The data generated via the transcriptomic analysis of the interspecies cross-feeders was used to assess how strains adapt to co-culture with an auxotrophic partner. Preliminary evaluation of differential gene expression between E. coli co-cultures and monocultures show that not all strains react the same to co-culture. We also found an upregulation of amino acid transporter and amino acid biosynthesis genes in co-cultured E. coli strains as compared to their monoculture counterparts. This work shows that using cross-feeding pairs of bacteria can enable us to build functional synthetic microbial communities by addressing the difficulties in co-culture growth.