In response to the loss of microbial efficiency caused by environmental stress in biomanufacturing, CRISPR-Cas gene editing technology has become a core tool for enhancing stress tolerance by accurately targeting genomic loci. This article systematically reviews the progress of its application. By optimizing engineered nucleases, gRNA design, and innovative delivery strategies, this technology successfully regulates key pathways in oxidative stress responses. It integrates functional genome screening with dynamic regulation to examine the networks of multi-gene collaborative tolerance. In the construction of high-stress-tolerant industrial chassis cells, the stress survival rate (>90% in Bacillus subtilis under thermal stress) and product synthesis ability (such as cellulose producing ethanol up to 4.5 g/L) of strains such as Escherichia coli and Corynebacterium glutamicum were significantly improved. Current challenges focus on delivery efficiency, off-target risks, and complex regulatory bottlenecks. In the future, the development of new editing tools and intelligent circuits will promote their industrial application in sustainable bio-manufacturing.
Zhang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.