Metabolic engineering of human gut microbiome: Recent developments and future perspectives
Review article, 2023

Many studies have demonstrated that the gut microbiota is associated with human health and disease. Manipulation of the gut microbiota, e.g. supplementation of probiotics, has been suggested to be feasible, but subject to limited therapeutic efficacy. To develop efficient microbiota-targeted diagnostic and therapeutic strategies, metabolic engineering has been applied to construct genetically modified probiotics and synthetic microbial consortia. This review mainly discusses commonly adopted strategies for metabolic engineering in the human gut microbiome, including the use of in silico, in vitro, or in vivo approaches for iterative design and construction of engineered probiotics or microbial consortia. Especially, we highlight how genome-scale metabolic models can be applied to advance our understanding of the gut microbiota. Also, we review the recent applications of metabolic engineering in gut microbiome studies as well as discuss important challenges and opportunities.

Metabolic modeling

Microbial consortia

Gut microbiome

Probiotics

Engineered microbes

Author

Peishun Li

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Stefan Roos

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)

Hao Luo

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Boyang Ji

BioInnovation Institute

Jens B Nielsen

BioInnovation Institute

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Metabolic Engineering

1096-7176 (ISSN) 1096-7184 (eISSN)

Vol. 79 1-13

Subject Categories

Food Science

Microbiology

Microbiology in the medical area

DOI

10.1016/j.ymben.2023.06.006

PubMed

37364774

More information

Latest update

7/20/2023