Engineered Membrane Vesicle Production via oprF or oprI Deletion Has Distinct Phenotypic Effects in Pseudomonas putida

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Membrane vesicle (MV) production is a natural phenomenon in Gram-negative bacteria and represents an emerging synthetic biology tool for the secretion of biomolecules or bioproducts. Manipulation of membrane components has proven successful in enhancing MV production. However, the impact of membrane disruptions on strain fitness and protein composition warrants further investigation for the use of MVs in industrial bioprocesses. Here, we identify and characterize two genetic engineering strategies for inducing hypervesiculation-deletion of genes for the outer membrane porin OprF or the lipoprotein OprI-in the commonly used platform Pseudomonas putida KT2440. Deletion of oprI generated up to a 1.5-fold increase in MVs, larger MVs with a greater proportion of outer membrane proteins, and no significant impact on strain fitness compared to wild type. In contrast, deletion of oprF, relative to wild type, generated up to a 4-fold increase in MVs but diminished growth, permeabilized membranes, and increased cytosolic protein packaging. Both hypervesiculation phenotypes increased nontargeted and MV-targeted mNeonGreen extracellular signal by up to 6-fold, demonstrating vesiculation as a mechanism for protein secretion. Despite increased blebbing of MVs from gene deletions, proteins involved in membrane biosynthesis were not elevated relative to wild type. Overexpression of gpsA, which initiates glycerophospholipid biosynthesis, in the ..delta..oprF background improved the membrane integrity by 37% and maintained MV formation, highlighting the importance of membrane biosynthesis in restoring the membrane in hypervesiculating strains. Together, this study provides genetic engineering strategies with corresponding phenotypic outcomes toward providing a synthetic biology toolset for MV deployment in P. putida.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)2739-2752
Number of pages14
JournalACS Synthetic Biology
Volume14
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

NLR Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-2A00-93530

Keywords

  • hypervesiculation
  • membrane vesicles
  • outer membrane vesicles
  • protein secretion
  • proteomics

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