Production of biorenewable styrene: utilization of biomass-derived sugars and insights into toxicity

Author:

Lian Jieni1,McKenna Rebekah2,Rover Marjorie R1,Nielsen David R2,Wen Zhiyou3,Jarboe Laura R4

Affiliation:

1. grid.34421.30 0000000419367312 Bioeconomy Institute Iowa State University 50011-2230 Ames IA USA

2. grid.215654.1 0000000121512636 Chemical Engineering, School for Engineering of Matter, Transport, and Energy Arizona State University Phoenix AZ USA

3. grid.34421.30 0000000419367312 Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition Iowa State University Ames IA USA

4. grid.34421.30 0000000419367312 Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering Iowa State University 3051 Sweeney Hall 50011-2230 Ames IA USA

Abstract

Abstract Fermentative production of styrene from glucose has been previously demonstrated in Escherichia coli. Here, we demonstrate the production of styrene from the sugars derived from lignocellulosic biomass depolymerized by fast pyrolysis. A previously engineered styrene-producing strain was further engineered for utilization of the anhydrosugar levoglucosan via expression of levoglucosan kinase. The resulting strain produced 240 ± 3 mg L−1 styrene from pure levoglucosan, similar to the 251 ± 3 mg L−1 produced from glucose. When provided at a concentration of 5 g L−1, pyrolytic sugars supported styrene production at titers similar to those from pure sugars, demonstrating the feasibility of producing this important industrial chemical from biomass-derived sugars. However, the toxicity of contaminant compounds in the biomass-derived sugars and styrene itself limit further gains in production. Styrene toxicity is generally believed to be due to membrane damage. Contrary to this prevailing wisdom, our quantitative assessment during challenge with up to 200 mg L−1 of exogenously provided styrene showed little change in membrane integrity; membrane disruption was observed only during styrene production. Membrane fluidity was also quantified during styrene production, but no changes were observed relative to the non-producing control strain. This observation that styrene production is much more damaging to the membrane integrity than challenge with exogenously supplied styrene provides insight into the mechanism of styrene toxicity and emphasizes the importance of verifying proposed toxicity mechanisms during production instead of relying upon results obtained during exogenous challenge.

Funder

Iowa State University

Iowa State University Bioeconomy Institute

Iowa Energy Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Biotechnology,Bioengineering

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