K. sucrofermentans naturally produces high-purity cellulose, a material that is in great demand for biomedical applications and the production of packaging material and textiles. Two properties of this type of cellulose are that it supports wound healing and prevents infections. “However, the bacteria grow slowly and produce limited amounts of cellulose. We therefore had to find a way to boost production,” explains Julie Laurent, a doctoral student in Studart's group and first author of a study that has just been published in the scientific journal PNAS.
The approach she developed has succeeded in producing a small number of Komagataeibacter variants that generate up to seventy percent more cellulose than in their original form.
Accelerating evolution with UV light
The materials researcher first had to create new variants of the original bacterium that occurs in nature – known as the wild type. To do this, Julie Laurent irradiated the bacterial cells with UV-C light, which damages random points of the bacterial DNA. She then placed the bacteria in a dark room to prevent any repair of the DNA damage and to thereby induce mutations.
Using a miniature apparatus, she then encapsulated each bacterial cell in a tiny droplet of nutrient solution and allowed the cells to produce cellulose for a specific length of time. After the incubation period, she used fluorescence microscopy to analyse which of the cells had produced a lot of cellulose and which had produced none or very little.
By means of a sorting system developed by the group of ETH chemist Andrew De Mello, Studart’s team automatically sorted out those cells that had evolved to produce an exceptionally large amount of cellulose. This sorting system is fully automated and very fast. In a matter of minutes, it can scan half a million droplets with a laser and sort out those containing the most cellulose. Only four remained that produced 50 to 70 percent more cellulose than the wild type.
The evolved K. sucrofermentans cells can grow and produce cellulose in mats in glass vials at the interface between air and water. Such a mat naturally weighs between two and three milligrams and is about 1.5 millimetres thick. The cellulose mats of the newly evolved variants are almost twice as heavy and thick as the wild type.