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Carbon-negative production of acetone and isopropanol by gas fermentation at industrial pilot scale

Published in:

Nature Biotechnology 40(3) , 335-344 ( 2022)

Author(s):

Liew, Fungmin Eric, Nogle, Robert, Abdalla, Tanus, Rasor, Blake J., Canter, Christina, Jensen, Rasmus O., Wang, Lan, Strutz, Jonathan, Chirania, Payal, De Tissera, Sashini, Mueller, Alexander P., Ruan, Zhenhua, Gao, Allan, Tran, Loan, Engle, Nancy L., Bromley, Jason C., Daniell, James, Conrado, Robert, Tschaplinski, Timothy J., Giannone, Richard J., Hettich, Robert L., Karim, Ashty S., Simpson, Séan D., Brown, Steven D., Leang, Ching, Jewett, Michael C., Köpke, Michael

DOI:

10.1038/s41587-021-01195-w

Abstract:

Many industrial chemicals that are produced from fossil resources could be manufactured more sustainably through fermentation. Here we describe the development of a carbon-negative fermentation route to producing the industrially important chemicals acetone and isopropanol from abundant, low-cost waste gas feedstocks, such as industrial emissions and syngas. Using a combinatorial pathway library approach, we first mined a historical industrial strain collection for superior enzymes that we used to engineer the autotrophic acetogen Clostridium autoethanogenum. Next, we used omics analysis, kinetic modeling and cell-free prototyping to optimize flux. Finally, we scaled-up our optimized strains for continuous production at rates of up to ~3 g/L/h and ~90% selectivity. Life cycle analysis confirmed a negative carbon footprint for the products. Unlike traditional production processes, which result in release of greenhouse gases, our process fixes carbon. These results show that engineered acetogens enable sustainable, high-efficiency, high-selectivity chemicals production. We expect that our approach can be readily adapted to a wide range of commodity chemicals.

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