RESUMO
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
RESUMO
Engineering resource allocation in biological systems is an ongoing challenge. Organisms allocate resources for ensuring survival, reducing the productivity of synthetic biology functions. Here we present a new approach for engineering the resource allocation of Escherichia coli by rationally modifying its transcriptional regulatory network. Our method (ReProMin) identifies the minimal set of genetic interventions that maximizes the savings in cell resources. To this end, we categorized transcription factors according to the essentiality of its targets and we used proteomic data to rank them. We designed the combinatorial removal of transcription factors that maximize the release of resources. Our resulting strain containing only three mutations, theoretically releasing 0.5% of its proteome, had higher proteome budget, increased production of an engineered metabolic pathway and showed that the regulatory interventions are highly specific. This approach shows that combining proteomic and regulatory data is an effective way of optimizing strains using conventional molecular methods.