Efficient ethanol production from brown macroalgae sugars by a synthetic yeast platform
Author(s) -
Maria Enquist-Newman,
Ann Marie E. Faust,
Daniel D. Bravo,
Christine Nicole S. Santos,
Ryan Raisner,
Arthur Hanel,
Preethi Sarvabhowman,
Chi Le,
Drew D. Regitsky,
Susan Cooper,
Lars Peereboom,
Alana Clark,
Yessica C. Martinez,
Joshua Goldsmith,
Min Y. Cho,
Paul D. Donohoue,
Lily Luo,
Brigit Lamberson,
Pramila Tamrakar,
Edward Kim,
Jeffrey L. Villari,
Avinash Gill,
Shital A. Tripathi,
Padma Karamchedu,
Carlos J. Paredes,
Vineet Rajgarhia,
Hans Kristian Kotlar,
Richard B. Bailey,
Dennis J. Miller,
Nicholas Ohler,
Candace Swimmer,
Yasuo Yoshikuni
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature12771
Subject(s) - biofuel , ethanol fuel , fermentation , saccharomyces cerevisiae , yeast , metabolic engineering , chemistry , raw material , mannitol , biology , food science , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , enzyme , organic chemistry
The increasing demands placed on natural resources for fuel and food production require that we explore the use of efficient, sustainable feedstocks such as brown macroalgae. The full potential of brown macroalgae as feedstocks for commercial-scale fuel ethanol production, however, requires extensive re-engineering of the alginate and mannitol catabolic pathways in the standard industrial microbe Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here we present the discovery of an alginate monomer (4-deoxy-L-erythro-5-hexoseulose uronate, or DEHU) transporter from the alginolytic eukaryote Asteromyces cruciatus. The genomic integration and overexpression of the gene encoding this transporter, together with the necessary bacterial alginate and deregulated native mannitol catabolism genes, conferred the ability of an S. cerevisiae strain to efficiently metabolize DEHU and mannitol. When this platform was further adapted to grow on mannitol and DEHU under anaerobic conditions, it was capable of ethanol fermentation from mannitol and DEHU, achieving titres of 4.6% (v/v) (36.2 g l(-1)) and yields up to 83% of the maximum theoretical yield from consumed sugars. These results show that all major sugars in brown macroalgae can be used as feedstocks for biofuels and value-added renewable chemicals in a manner that is comparable to traditional arable-land-based feedstocks.
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