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Advancements in genetic engineering for enhanced Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) production: a comprehensive review of metabolic pathway manipulation and gene deletion strategies

Bioengineered 2025 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Raghavendra Paduvari, M S Divyashree M S Divyashree M S Divyashree M S Divyashree

Summary

This review examines genetic engineering strategies for boosting production of polyhydroxyalkanoates, which are biodegradable bioplastics produced by bacteria. Researchers describe how modifying metabolic pathways and deleting competing genes can significantly increase bioplastic yields. The technology is relevant to the microplastics problem because scaling up biodegradable plastic alternatives could help reduce the accumulation of persistent conventional plastics in the environment.

Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) are bioplastics produced by few bacteria as intracellular lipid inclusions under excess carbon source and nutrient-deprived conditions. These polymers are biodegradable and resemble petroleum-based plastics. The rising environmental concerns have increased the demand for PHA, but the low yield in wild-type bacterial strains limits large-scale production. An improvement in the PHA production can be achieved by genetically engineering the wild-type bacterial strains by removing competitive pathways that divert the metabolites away from PHA biosynthesis, cloning strong promotors to overexpress the genes involved in PHA biosynthesis and constructing non-native metabolic pathways that feed the metabolites for PHA production. The desired monomers in the PHA polymers were obtained by elimination of genes involved in PHA biosynthetic pathway. The chain length degradation specific-gene deletion of β-oxidation pathway resulted in the accumulation of PHA monomers having high carbon chain length. A controlled accumulation of monomers in the PHA polymer was achieved by constructing novel pathways in the bacteria and deleting native genes of competitive pathways from the genome of non-PHA producers. The present review attempts to showcase the novel genetic modification approaches conducted so far to enhance the PHA production with a special focus on metabolic pathway gene deletion in various bacteria.

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