Sustainable production of plastic-degrading enzymes in Chlamydomonas pacifica
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Abstract
The discovery of a new extremophile alga, Chlamydomonas pacifica , provides an opportunity to expand on heterologous protein expression beyond the traditional Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. C. pacifica is a unicellular extremophile capable of surviving at high pH, high temperatures, and high salinity. These various growth conditions allow C. pacifica to outcompete any invading contaminants in open-air environments. Developing this novel species as a platform for recombinant protein production could significantly advance commercial microalgal recombinant protein production. We have previously shown that C. reinhardtii can secrete a plastic-degrading enzyme: a PETase known as PHL7. This PETase is capable of cleaving ester bonds and has been used commercially for the degradation of PET plastics. However, the expression of such an enzyme has yet to be done in open raceway ponds and on a large scale. Here, we describe the culturing of PHL7 transgenic C. pacifica strain in three 80L raceway ponds and the measurements of recombinant enzymatic expression and activity found in the culture media. Our work provides proof of concept that this new organism can produce functional PHL7 enzymes in addition to producing the valuable components that inherently exist in the C. pacifica algae biomass.
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further engineering of C. pacifica could improve protein yield and range
- This is super interesting work! Wonder if you’re considering the flip side: to use either phylogenetic comparative methods to hypothesize candidates that could give rise to the extremophilic properties of pacifica/other extremophiles vs reinhardtii/others such that they can be tested/targeted in reinhardtii or screening of reinhardtii mutants that share growth conditions with pacifica so that you can leverage all the fine tuning properties for biotech applications that are more mature/optimized in reinhardtii. I suspect the later may have been tried but maybe not genome wide or conditions this extreme.
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