Metabolic engineering of a thermophilic bacterium to produce ethanol at high yield
Top Cited Papers
- 16 September 2008
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (37), 13769-13774
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0801266105
Abstract
We report engineering Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum, a thermophilic anaerobic bacterium that ferments xylan and biomass-derived sugars, to produce ethanol at high yield. Knockout of genes involved in organic acid formation (acetate kinase, phosphate acetyltransferase, and L-lactate dehydrogenase) resulted in a strain able to produce ethanol as the only detectable organic product and substantial changes in electron flow relative to the wild type. Ethanol formation in the engineered strain (ALK2) utilizes pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase with electrons transferred from ferredoxin to NAD(P), a pathway different from that in previously described microbes with a homoethanol fermentation. The homoethanologenic phenotype was stable for >150 generations in continuous culture. The growth rate of strain ALK2 was similar to the wild-type strain, with a reduction in cell yield proportional to the decreased ATP availability resulting from acetate kinase inactivation. Glucose and xylose are co-utilized and utilization of mannose and arabinose commences before glucose and xylose are exhausted. Using strain ALK2 in simultaneous hydrolysis and fermentation experiments at 50 degrees C allows a 2.5-fold reduction in cellulase loading compared with using Saccharomyces cerevisiae at 37 degrees C. The maximum ethanol titer produced by strain ALK2, 37 g/liter, is the highest reported thus far for a thermophilic anaerobe, although further improvements are desired and likely possible. Our results extend the frontier of metabolic engineering in thermophilic hosts, have the potential to significantly lower the cost of cellulosic ethanol production, and support the feasibility of further cost reductions through engineering a diversity of host organisms.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Construction of an Escherichia coli K-12 Mutant for Homoethanologenic Fermentation of Glucose or Xylose without Foreign GenesApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2007
- Biomass Recalcitrance: Engineering Plants and Enzymes for Biofuels ProductionScience, 2007
- Enzyme–microbe synergy during cellulose hydrolysis by Clostridium thermocellumProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Performance and stability of ethanologenic Escherichia coli strain FBR5 during continuous culture on xylose and glucoseJournal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology, 2006
- Ethanol Can Contribute to Energy and Environmental GoalsScience, 2006
- Role of Spontaneous Current Oscillations during High-Efficiency Electrotransformation of Thermophilic AnaerobesApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2005
- Simultaneous Saccharification and Co‐Fermentation of Crystalline Cellulose and Sugar Cane Bagasse Hemicellulose Hydrolysate to Lactate by a Thermotolerant Acidophilic Bacillus sp.Biotechnology Progress, 2005
- Physiological Function of Alcohol Dehydrogenases and Long-Chain (C 30 ) Fatty Acids in Alcohol Tolerance of Thermoanaerobacter ethanolicusApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2002
- Engineering a Homo-Ethanol Pathway in Escherichia coli : Increased Glycolytic Flux and Levels of Expression of Glycolytic Genes during Xylose FermentationJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- Transformation of Thermoanaerobacterium sp. strain JW/SL-YS485 with plasmid pIKM1 conferring kanamycin resistanceFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1997