C3 Seminar: Konstantinos Vavitsas
Understanding and expanding the photosynthetic organisms for terpenoid production.
Terpenoids are one of the largest classes of chemical compounds, some of them with industrial interest as nutraceuticals, biofuels, or chemical feedstock. Even though they are mainly plant-derived compounds, terpenoid production in photosynthetic organisms is rather unexplored, with a few successful studies reported in the literature. In this presentation I will elaborate on the potential of using plant chloroplasts and cyanobacteria as biosynthetic vessels, with a focus on terpenoid production, by linking productivity directly and indirectly on photosynthesis. First, I will theoretically investigate the feasibility of redirecting photosynthetic products—electrons and fixed carbon—towards heterologous compounds. I will subsequently present the full localization of a diterpenoid biosynthetic pathway within the Nicotiana benthamiana chloroplast, and the protein modifications required to achieve this goal. Faster-growing and simpler photosynthetic systems, however, have a larger bioproduction potential.
Therefore, I examine the effects of introducing two heterologous biosynthetic pathways in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, using targeted metabolite analysis and computational modelling. Finally, I will outline some perspectives on the work I will perform as part of my fellowship: development of a modular genetic engineering toolbox for model cyanobacterial species, and its implementation on terpenoid production.
About the speaker
Dr Konstantinos Vavitsas – University of Queensland
Konstantinos is a CSIRO Future Science Fellow at the University of Queensland, and a member of the executive board of Synthetic Biology Australasia. He obtained his B.Sc. in Biology from the University of Athens, Greece, and his M.Sc. in Applied Biotechnology from Uppsala University, Sweden. He obtained his PhD on Biotechnology/Synthetic Biology from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, for his work on diterpenoids production in photosynthetic organisms.
Light refreshments provided after talk - All are welcome!