2021 Annual Meeting
(7c) Genome-Wide Knockout Screens Reveal New Engineering Targets That Enhance Protein Secretion in a Non-Model Yeast
Authors
While integration of exogenous genes can confer new cellular functions and post-translational modifications, engineering of the endogenous host-cell genome may expand overall secretory capacity through deletion of unneeded proteins and pathways or expansion of secretory organelles. In a non-model host like K. phaffii, only 50-70% of the genome is functionally annotated, limiting the extent of rational genomic engineering. Tools for unbiased functional genomics are needed to discover new engineering targets that may improve protein secretion.
Here, we present the application of two CRISPR-Cas9 knockout libraries for the discovery of new engineering targets in K. phaffii. First, we targeted all endogenous secreted host cell proteins and identified non-essential genes in the yeast secretory pathway. Deletion of ~10 non-essential HCPs yielded strains with increased secreted titer and purity of several recombinant proteins. Second, we created a pooled genome-wide knockout library. We employed a novel flow-cytometric assay to identify library members with enhanced secretion of a mAb. Subsequent validation of discovered knockouts yielded new targets for strain engineering. These unbiased approaches to serve as powerful demonstrations for the genomic engineering of poorly characterized manufacturing hosts for complex phenotypes.