Abstract

Biofermentative production of styrene from renewable carbon sources is crucially dependent on strain tolerance and viability at elevated styrene concentrations. Solvent-driven collapse of bacterial plasma membranes limits yields and is technologically restrictive. Styrene is a hydrophobic solvent that readily partitions into the membrane interior and alters membrane-chain order and packing. We investigate styrene incorporation into model membranes and the role lipid chains play as determinants of membrane stability in the presence of styrene. MD simulations reveal styrene phase separation followed by irreversible segregation into the membrane interior. Solid state NMR shows committed partitioning of styrene into the membrane interior with persistence of the bilayer phase up to 67 mol % styrene. Saturated-chain lipid membranes were able to retain integrity even at 80 mol % styrene, whereas in unsaturated lipid membranes, we observe the onset of a non-bilayer phase of small lipid aggregates in coexistence with styrene-saturated membranes. Shorter-chain saturated lipid membranes were seen to tolerate styrene better, which is consistent with observed chain length reduction in bacteria grown in the presence of small molecule solvents. Unsaturation at mid-chain position appears to reduce the membrane tolerance to styrene and conversion from cis- to trans-chain unsaturation does not alter membrane phase stability but the lipid order in trans-chains is less affected than cis.

Highlights

  • Polystyrene is one of the most commonly used plastics in everyday life

  • We have shown that lipid chain composition is an important determinant of membrane stability in the presence of butyl methacryalte (BMA), log P = 2.88, and that membrane tolerance to BMA incorporation depends on the saturation and isomerization of lipid hydrocarbon chains

  • We investigate the response of model lipid membranes to the presence of styrene and the impact of lipid chain composition on membrane stability and resistance to styrene-mediated phase disruption

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Summary

Introduction

Polystyrene is one of the most commonly used plastics in everyday life. It is produced from monomeric styrene by suspension polymerization and is ubiquitously used in numerous important industrial polymers and co-polymer applications. Styrene is a volatile hydrophobic solvent manufactured as a commodity chemical at annual volumes of 25 million tons in a 30 billion USD market.[1] Current production of styrene relies on catalytic dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene,[1] which, in turn, is derived from petrochemical sources. The chemocatalytic reaction is an endothermal reaction that requires 3 tons of steam per ton of styrene produced. In 2002, ethylbenzene and styrene production were the second and third largest energy consumers in the US petrochemical industry, estimated from the production volume

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