Author:
Wang Liang,Chauliac Diane,Rhee Mun Su,Panneerselvam Anushadevi,Ingram Lonnie O.,Shanmugam K. T.
Abstract
Methane can be converted to triose dihydroxyacetone (DHA) by chemical processes with formaldehyde as an intermediate. Carbon dioxide, a by-product of various industries including ethanol/butanol biorefineries, can also be converted to formaldehyde and then to DHA. DHA, upon entry into a cell and phosphorylation to DHA-3-phosphate, enters the glycolytic pathway and can be fermented to any one of several products. However, DHA is inhibitory to microbes due to its chemical interaction with cellular components. Fermentation of DHA tod-lactate byEscherichia colistrain TG113 was inefficient, and growth was inhibited by 30 g⋅L−1DHA. An ATP-dependent DHA kinase fromKlebsiella oxytoca(pDC117d) permitted growth of strain TG113 in a medium with 30 g⋅L−1DHA, and in a fed-batch fermentation thed-lactate titer of TG113(pDC117d) was 580 ± 21 mM at a yield of 0.92 g⋅g−1DHA fermented.Klebsiella variicolastrain LW225, with a higher glucose flux thanE. coli, produced 811 ± 26 mMd-lactic acid at an average volumetric productivity of 2.0 g−1⋅L−1⋅h−1. Fermentation of DHA required a balance between transport of the triose and utilization by the microorganism. Using other engineeredE. colistrains, we also fermented DHA to succinic acid and ethanol, demonstrating the potential of converting CH4and CO2to value-added chemicals and fuels by a combination of chemical/biological processes.
Funder
DOE | EERE | Biomass Program
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
7 articles.
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