The production of hydrogen from low-cost renewable biomass is appealing because biomass is an enriched, collectable renewable energy source. The use of carbohydrates as high-density hydrogen carriers and energy sources for hydrogen production is possible due to cell-free synthetic biology technology.
Synthetic pathway biotransformation (SyPaB) is the implementation of complicated biochemical reactions by the
in vitro assembly of a large number of enzymes and coenzymes
. Hydrogen can be produced from carbohydrate with an overall reaction of C
6H
10O
5 (aq) + 7H
2O (l) --> 12H
2 (g) + 6CO
2 (g). As a result, nearly 12 moles of dihydrogen are produced per glucose equivalent of polysaccharides and water by this non-natural synthetic pathway, which contains 13-14 enzymes.
For facilitating cascade reactions among three enzymes:
Thermus thermophilus triose phosphate Isomerase (
TtcTIM),
Thermotoga maritima fructose bisphosphate aldolase (
TmALD), and
Thermotoga maritima fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (
TmFBP), we need find optimal conditions and proper enzyme ratios for co-immobilized enzymes (combi-CLEAs). In this talk, we will present our recent progresses in enzyme purification, immobilization, and substrate channeling among cascade enzymes.