Breadcrumb
- Home
- Publications
- Proceedings
- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division
- Biobased Fuels and Chemicals I
- (346d) Metabolic Engineering for the Production Fuels and Chemicals From Bio-Oils
Ethanol and succinate were chosen as model products and E. coli as model organism to illustrate the feasibility of the aforementioned approach. The maximum theoretical yields for the synthesis of ethanol and succinate from FAs are 1.33 g/g and 1.85 g/g, respectively, compared to 0.51 g/g (ethanol) and 1.12 g/g (succinate) for their production from sugars. This implies that the use of FAs would allow for a 2.6- and 1.7-fold increase in the yield of ethanol and succinate, respectively. To enhance ethanol production, we created a mutant of the enzyme acetaldehyde/alcohol dehydrogenase (r-AdhE) that is functional in the presence of oxygen. Overexpression of r-AdhE in wild-type E. coli MG1655 grown under micro-respiratory conditions led to a yield of 0.60 g ethanol/g FAs, which already surpasses the maximum theoretical from sugars. Similar improvements in the synthesis of succinate were achieved by engineering the TCA cycle and the glyoxylate shunt to prevent succinate degradation and enhance its synthesis.