Abstract

BackgroundThere has been a great deal of interest in fuel productions from lignocellulosic biomass to minimize the conflict between food and fuel use. The bioconversion of xylose, which is the second most abundant sugar present after glucose in lignocellulosic biomass, is important for the development of cost effective bioprocesses to fuels. Rhodococcus opacus PD630, an oleaginous bacterium, accumulates large amounts of triacylglycerols (TAGs), which can be processed into advanced liquid fuels. However, R. opacus PD630 does not metabolize xylose.ResultsWe generated DNA libraries from a Streptomyces bacterium capable of utilizing xylose and introduced them into R. opacus PD630. Xsp8, one of the engineered strains, was capable of growing on up to 180 g L-1 of xylose. Xsp8 grown in batch-cultures derived from unbleached kraft hardwood pulp hydrolysate containing 70 g L-1 total sugars was able to completely and simultaneously utilize xylose and glucose present in the lignocellulosic feedstock, and yielded 11.0 g L-1 of TAGs as fatty acids, corresponding to 45.8% of the cell dry weight. The yield of total fatty acids per gram of sugars consumed was 0.178 g, which consisted primarily of palmitic acid and oleic acid. The engineered strain Xsp8 was introduced with two heterologous genes from Streptomyces: xylA, encoding xylose isomerase, and xylB, encoding xylulokinase. We further demonstrated that in addition to the introduction and the concomitant expression of heterologous xylA and xylB genes, there is another molecular target in the R. opacus genome which fully enables the functionality of xylA and xylB genes to generate the robust xylose-fermenting strain capable of efficiently producing TAGs at high xylose concentrations.ConclusionWe successfully engineered a R. opacus strain that is capable of completely utilizing high concentrations of xylose or mixed xylose/glucose simultaneously, and substantiated its suitability for TAG production. This study demonstrates that the engineered strain possesses a key trait of converters for lipid-based fuels production from lignocellulosic biomass.

Highlights

  • There has been a great deal of interest in fuel productions from lignocellulosic biomass to minimize the conflict between food and fuel use

  • We successfully engineered a R. opacus strain that is capable of completely utilizing high concentrations of xylose or mixed xylose/glucose simultaneously, and substantiated its suitability for TAG production

  • The kinetics of the cellulose binding domain on Xx2y-l1Bto -6 (xylB) needs to be investigated. These findings suggest that a partly functional pathway consisting of the second step that phosphorylates Dxylulose by xylulokinase in xylose metabolism is present in the parental R. opacus strain PD630

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There has been a great deal of interest in fuel productions from lignocellulosic biomass to minimize the conflict between food and fuel use. Extensive discussion towards the development of clean and sustainable energy sources [4], especially successfully converted to aviation biofuel and the consensus is that generally any TAGs (with the exception of those with very short chain fatty acids) are acceptable as precursors for fuel production [12]. These energy-rich TAG molecules have attracted much attention for developing sustainable and high-quality fuels. The limited supply of bioresources for obtaining TAGs is a major obstacle for the production of lipid-based biofuels, in spite of the advantageous impacts that commercialization of TAG-based biofuels could provide

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.