Abstract
BackgroundThe thermophilic, anaerobic bacterium Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum digests hemicellulose and utilizes the major sugars present in biomass. It was previously engineered to produce ethanol at yields equivalent to yeast. While saccharolytic anaerobes have been long studied as potential biomass-fermenting organisms, development efforts for commercial ethanol production have not been reported.ResultsHere, we describe the highest ethanol titers achieved from T. saccharolyticum during a 4-year project to develop it for industrial production of ethanol from pre-treated hardwood at 51–55 °C. We describe organism and bioprocess development efforts undertaken to improve ethanol production. The final strain M2886 was generated by removing genes for exopolysaccharide synthesis, the regulator perR, and re-introduction of phosphotransacetylase and acetate kinase into the methyglyoxal synthase gene. It was also subject to multiple rounds of adaptation and selection, resulting in mutations later identified by resequencing. The highest ethanol titer achieved was 70 g/L in batch culture with a mixture of cellobiose and maltodextrin. In a “mock hydrolysate” Simultaneous Saccharification and Fermentation (SSF) with Sigmacell-20, glucose, xylose, and acetic acid, an ethanol titer of 61 g/L was achieved, at 92 % of theoretical yield. Fungal cellulases were rapidly inactivated under these conditions and had to be supplemented with cellulosomes from C. thermocellum. Ethanol titers of 31 g/L were reached in a 100 L SSF of pre-treated hardwood and 26 g/L in a fermentation of a hardwood hemicellulose extract.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates that thermophilic anaerobes are capable of producing ethanol at high yield and at titers greater than 60 g/L from purified substrates, but additional work is needed to produce the same ethanol titers from pre-treated hardwood.
Highlights
The thermophilic, anaerobic bacterium Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum digests hemicellulose and utilizes the major sugars present in biomass
Strain development We previously described a method to perform markerless genetic manipulations in T. saccharolyticum
It was used to eliminate lactate and acetate production in wild-type strain JW/SL-YS485 (DSM 8691), creating homoethanologen strain M355 [13]. This strain was subjected to multiple rounds of nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis and screening for high ethanol titers in the presence of an enzymatic hydrolysate from pre-treated hardwood by Panlabs Biologics in Taiwan
Summary
The thermophilic, anaerobic bacterium Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum digests hemicellulose and utilizes the major sugars present in biomass. Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum ferments xylan, the main polymer in hemicellulose, and utilizes all other major biomass sugars, including cellobiose, glucose, mannose, xylose, galactose, and arabinose. This microorganism does not, ferment cellulose to any significant degree. Beginning with a homoethanologenic strain of T. saccharolyticum, Shaw et al [9] achieved an ethanol titer of 54 g/L by introducing genes encoding urease and using urea as the nitrogen source. To our knowledge, this is the highest titer of produced ethanol reported for a thermophilic bacterium
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