Cell-free synthetic pathway biotransformation biosystems are proposed as a new low-cost biomanufacturing platform compared to
microbial fermentation used for thousands of years. Cell-free biosystems have several advantages suitable in industrial applications: •
In vitro biosystems can implement some biological reactions that living microbes or chemical
catalysts cannot implement before. For example,
beta-1,4-glucosidic bond linked cellulose can be converted to
alpha-1,4-glucosidic bond linked starch by a mixture of intracellular and extracellular enzymes in a single reaction container. • Enzymatic systems, without the barrier of cellular membrane, usually have faster
reaction rates than microbial systems. For instance, enzymatic fuel cells usually have much higher power outputs than microbial fuel cells. • Enzyme cocktails can tolerate toxic compounds better than microorganisms. • Enzyme mixtures usually work under broad reaction conditions, such as high temperature, low
pH, the presence of
organic solvents or
ionic liquids. More recent studies, such as the study done by Spirin
et al. with prokaryotic and eukaryotic version of their cell-free translation system, have also synthesized proteins with increased production, incorporating techniques like continuous flow to add materials and remove products. With such advances in yield, productivity applications have been expanded, such as the synthesis of fusion proteins to potentially serve as vaccines for
B-cell lymphomas. Additionally, cell-free protein synthesis is becoming a new alternative choice for fast protein synthesis. Further, Calhoun and Swartz were able to use a glycolytic intermediate to fuel a cell-free system, enabling relatively inexpensive
ATP generation compared to reagent usage in
phosphoenolpyruvate reactions.
Unnatural amino acid incorporation Cell-free systems have also been used to incorporate
unnatural amino acids. Shimizu
et al. were able to change a
stop codon to a
sense codon by omitting the RF1
release factor, indicating ability to insert desired amino acids in unnatural situations. This is of use in systems where working inside a cell is problematic, such as the process of amino acid metabolism preventing specific labelling of amino acids that would be useful in multidimensional
NMR spectroscopy. Kigawa
et al.were able to successfully label amino acids in a cell-free system where amino acid metabolism was no longer present, thus making such systems useful to NMR studies. ==References==