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Review
. 2020 Aug 4:2020:9078303.
doi: 10.34133/2020/9078303. eCollection 2020.

Reconfiguring Plant Metabolism for Biodegradable Plastic Production

Affiliations
Review

Reconfiguring Plant Metabolism for Biodegradable Plastic Production

Haiwei Lu et al. Biodes Res. .

Abstract

For decades, plants have been the subject of genetic engineering to synthesize novel, value-added compounds. Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs), a large class of biodegradable biopolymers naturally synthesized in eubacteria, are among the novel products that have been introduced to make use of plant acetyl-CoA metabolic pathways. It was hoped that renewable PHA production would help address environmental issues associated with the accumulation of nondegradable plastic wastes. However, after three decades of effort synthesizing PHAs, and in particular the simplest form polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), and seeking to improve their production in plants, it has proven very difficult to reach a commercially profitable rate in a normally growing plant. This seems to be due to the growth defects associated with PHA production and accumulation in plant cells. Here, we review major breakthroughs that have been made in plant-based PHA synthesis using traditional genetic engineering approaches and discuss challenges that have been encountered. Then, from the point of view of plant synthetic biology, we provide perspectives on reprograming plant acetyl-CoA pathways for PHA production, with the goal of maximizing PHA yield while minimizing growth inhibition. Specifically, we suggest genetic elements that can be considered in genetic circuit design, approaches for nuclear genome and plastome modification, and the use of multiomics and mathematical modeling in understanding and restructuring plant metabolic pathways.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest regarding the publication of this article.

Figures

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Figure 2
Figure 2
Elements to consider in genetic circuit design and genome modification for targeted synthesis, export, and storage.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Informing PHA engineering with systems biology. Systems biology approaches (e.g., omics technologies, integrative analysis tools, and genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs)) can be used to inform the design-build-test-learn cycle of PHA engineering in plants by identifying biological parts for genetic circuit design and assessing the metabolic performance of PHA-synthesizing plants at systems level.

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