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- 2008 Annual Meeting
- Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division
- Advances In Biocatalysis II
- (64e) Scaleable Production of Free Fatty Acids in E. Coli: Implications for Biodiesel Production
To evaluate the performance of the above biocatalyst in a process that mimics large-scale industrial fermentation processes, fed-batch fermentation runs were performed at a 6 L scale. Under defined media fermentation conditions, using glycerol as the primary carbon source, the metabolically engineered E. coli strain produced a final titer of about 2.5 g/L and a linear productivity of about 0.17 mg/ml/h sustained for 12 h post-induction. During this linear period, a carbon mass yield of about 4.8% was achieved. At least 50% of the fatty acids produced were present in the free acid form. The observation that E. coli can efficiently convert a cheap carbon source such as glycerol into free fatty acid without apparent toxicity opens the door for developing microbial biodiesel as an alternative to petroleum-based long-chain alkane fuels.