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Role of Escherichia coli in Biofuel Production
Author(s) -
Veerendra Koppolu,
Veneela Kr Vasigala
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
microbiology insights
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1178-6361
DOI - 10.4137/mbi.s10878
Subject(s) - biofuel , renewable energy , renewable fuels , metabolic engineering , biochemical engineering , greenhouse gas , microbiology and biotechnology , production (economics) , environmental science , energy source , biomass (ecology) , synthetic biology , renewable resource , fossil fuel , productivity , waste management , chemistry , biology , engineering , agronomy , ecology , economics , biochemistry , bioinformatics , macroeconomics , enzyme
Increased energy consumption coupled with depleting petroleum reserves and increased greenhouse gas emissions have renewed our interest in generating fuels from renewable energy sources via microbial fermentation. Central to this problem is the choice of microorganism that catalyzes the production of fuels at high volumetric productivity and yield from cheap and abundantly available renewable energy sources. Microorganisms that are metabolically engineered to redirect renewable carbon sources into desired fuel products are contemplated as best choices to obtain high volumetric productivity and yield. Considering the availability of vast knowledge in genomic and metabolic fronts, Escherichia coli is regarded as a primary choice for the production of biofuels. Here, we reviewed the microbial production of liquid biofuels that have the potential to be used either alone or in combination with the present-day fuels. We specifically highlighted the metabolic engineering and synthetic biology approaches used to improve the production of biofuels from E. coli over the past few years. We also discussed the challenges that still exist for the biofuel production from E. coli and their possible solutions.

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