Abstract

BackgroundThe global demand for affordable carbon has never been stronger, and there is an imperative in many industrial processes to use waste streams to make products. Gas-fermenting acetogens offer a potential solution and several commercial gas fermentation plants are currently under construction. As energy limits acetogen metabolism, supply of H2 should diminish substrate loss to CO2 and facilitate production of reduced and energy-intensive products. However, the effects of H2 supply on CO-grown acetogens have yet to be experimentally quantified under controlled growth conditions.ResultsHere, we quantify the effects of H2 supplementation by comparing growth on CO, syngas, and a high-H2 CO gas mix using chemostat cultures of Clostridium autoethanogenum. Cultures were characterised at the molecular level using metabolomics, proteomics, gas analysis, and a genome-scale metabolic model. CO-limited chemostats operated at two steady-state biomass concentrations facilitated co-utilisation of CO and H2. We show that H2 supply strongly impacts carbon distribution with a fourfold reduction in substrate loss as CO2 (61% vs. 17%) and a proportional increase of flux to ethanol (15% vs. 61%). Notably, H2 supplementation lowers the molar acetate/ethanol ratio by fivefold. At the molecular level, quantitative proteome analysis showed no obvious changes leading to these metabolic rearrangements suggesting the involvement of post-translational regulation. Metabolic modelling showed that H2 availability provided reducing power via H2 oxidation and saved redox as cells reduced all the CO2 to formate directly using H2 in the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway. Modelling further indicated that the methylene-THF reductase reaction was ferredoxin reducing under all conditions. In combination with proteomics, modelling also showed that ethanol was synthesised through the acetaldehyde:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (AOR) activity.ConclusionsOur quantitative molecular analysis revealed that H2 drives rearrangements at several layers of metabolism and provides novel links between carbon, energy, and redox metabolism advancing our understanding of energy conservation in acetogens. We conclude that H2 supply can substantially increase the efficiency of gas fermentation and thus the feed gas composition can be considered an important factor in developing gas fermentation-based bioprocesses.

Highlights

  • The global demand for affordable carbon has never been stronger, and there is an imperative in many industrial processes to use waste streams to make products

  • We conclude that ­H2 supplementation can substantially improve the efficiency of gas fermentation and that ­H2 drives rearrangements at several molecular layers of acetogen metabolism

  • Gas‐fermenting chemostat cultures of Clostridium autoethanogenum Clostridium autoethanogenum is a promising biocatalyst for industrial-scale gas fermentation [4, 5], and it was used here to quantitate the effects of ­H2 supplementation on CO growth

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The global demand for affordable carbon has never been stronger, and there is an imperative in many industrial processes to use waste streams to make products. Gas fermentation shows potential in being part of this solution [1] and it has received considerable interest for converting inexpensive and abundant gaseous waste feedstocks (e.g., syngas [CO, ­H2, and ­CO2] from gasified biomass, industrial waste gases) into valuable fuels and chemicals [2,3,4,5], as opposed to the currently dominating fossil-based industries. H­ 2 supplementation should enable elevated production of reduced and energy-intensive products For the latter reasons, ­H2-rich gas streams (e.g., syngas) sourced from biomass, industrial, or municipal waste [12, 13] are attractive feedstocks

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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