posted on 2023-12-06, 18:40authored bySean Medin, Anastacia Dressel, David A. Specht, Timothy J. Sheppard, Megan E. Holycross, Matthew C. Reid, Esteban Gazel, Mingming Wu, Buz Barstow
Rare earth elements (REE) are essential ingredients in
many modern
technologies, yet their purification remains either environmentally
harmful or economically unviable. Adsorption, or biosorption, of REE
onto bacterial cell membranes offers a sustainable alternative to
traditional solvent extraction methods. But in order for biosorption-based
REE purification to compete economically, the capacity and specificity
of biosorption sites must be enhanced. Although there have been some
recent advances in characterizing the genetics of REE-biosorption,
the variety and complexity of bacterial membrane surface sites make
targeted genetic engineering difficult. Here, we propose using multiple
rounds of in vivo random mutagenesis induced by the
MP6 plasmid combined with plate-throughput REE-biosorption screening
to improve a microbe’s capacity and selectivity for biosorbing
REE. We engineered a strain of Vibrio natriegens capable
of biosorbing 210% more dysprosium compared to the wild-type and produced
selectivity improvements of up to 50% between the lightest (lanthanum)
and heaviest (lutetium) REE. We believe that mutations we observed
in ABC transporters as well as a nonessential protein in the BAM outer
membrane β-barrel protein insertion complex likely contribute
to somebut almost certainly not allof the biosorption
changes we observed. Given the ease of finding significant biosorption
mutants, these results highlight just how many genes likely contribute
to biosorption as well as the power of random mutagenesis in identifying
genes of interest and optimizing a biological system for a task.