Improving homology‐directed repair by small molecule agents for genetic engineering in unconventional yeast?—Learning from the engineering of mammalian system
The ability to precisely edit genomes by deleting or adding genetic information enables the study of biological functions and the building of efficient cell factories. In many unconventional yeasts, such as those promising new hosts for cell factory design but also human pathogenic yeasts and food spoilers, this progress has been limited by the fact that most yeasts favour non‐homologous end joining (NHEJ) over homologous recombination (HR) as a DNA repair mechanism, impairing genetic access to these hosts. In mammalian cells, small molecules that either inhibit proteins involved in NHEJ, enhance protein function in HR, or arrest the cell cycle in HR‐dominant phases are regarded as promising agents for the simple and transient increase of HR‐mediated genome editing without the need for a priori host engineering. Only a few of these chemicals have been applied to the engineering of yeast, although the targeted proteins are mostly conserved, making chemical agents a yet‐underexplored area for enhancing yeast engineering.
Lu, M. & Billerbeck, S. (2024) Improving homology-directed repair by small molecule agents for genetic engineering in unconventional yeast?—Learning from the engineering of mammalian systems. Microbial Biotechnology, 17, e14398. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.14398