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Researchers Modify E Coli To Create Higher-Density Biofuels

Posted on: Sunday, 21 December 2008, 09:25 CST

Genetic modification of bacterium results in alcohols with greater energy

For the first time, researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have successfully pushed nature beyond its limits by genetically modifying Escherichia coli, a bacterium often associated with food poisoning, to produce unusually long-chain alcohols essential in the creation of biofuels.

"Previously, we were able to synthesize long-chain alcohols containing five carbon atoms," said James Liao, UCLA professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering. "We stopped at five carbons at the time because that was what could be naturally achieved. Alcohols were never synthesized beyond five carbons. Now, we've figured out a way to engineer proteins for a whole new pathway in E. coli to produce longer-chain alcohols with up to eight carbon atoms."

The new protein and metabolic engineering method developed by Liao and his research team is detailed in the Dec. 30 issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The paper is currently available online.

Longer-chain alcohols, with five or more carbon atoms, pack more energy into a smaller space and are easier to separate from water, making them less volatile and corrosive than the commercially available biofuel ethanol. The greater the number of carbon atoms, the higher the density of the biofuel. Ethanol, most commonly made from corn or sugarcane, contains only two carbon atoms.

Organisms typically produce a large number of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. In their research, Liao's team examined the metabolism of amino acids in E. coli and changed the metabolic pathway of the bacterium by inserting two specially coded genes. One gene, from a cheese-making bacterium, and another, from a type of yeast often used in baking and brewing, were altered to enable E. coli's amino acid precursor, keto acid, to continue the chain-elongation process that ultimately resulted in longer-chain alcohols.

"This research is significant for two reasons," said Liao, the study's lead author. "From a scientific standpoint, we wanted to show that we can expand nature's capability in making alcohol molecules. We showed we are not limited by what nature creates. From an energy standpoint, we wanted to create larger, longer-chain molecules because they contain more energy. This is significant in the production of gasoline and even jet fuel."

Though this new frontier of biofuels production from organisms has the potential to address significant issues in global warming, the scientific significance of successful genetic modification could also mean great benefits beyond the environment.

"We used E. coli because the genetic system is well known, it grows quickly and we can engineer it very easily," said co-author Kechun Zhang, a UCLA postdoctoral researcher. "But this technique can actually be used on many different organisms, opening the door to vast possibilities in the realm of polymer as well as drug manufacturing."

The study was funded in part by the UCLA–Department of Energy Institute for Genomics and Proteomics.

E. Coli Image Courtesy Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science Foundation

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User Comments (1)

1. Posted by glmory on 12/21/2008, 17:17
I would compare this idea to putting a Model T engine in a Porsche. You are building this high tech system on top of a backbone that simply cannot support it. Let me explain myself further, the efficiency of photosynthesis is about 0.1% in green plants. In algae it exceeds 1%, but over 2% is rare, and over 10% just doesn't exist. Compare this to the over 40% efficiencies the most advanced solar cells get. Unlike the solar cells though, there have been millions of years of evolution perfecting the photosynthesis process so there is little chance we can improve on the process. Unless we improve photosynthesis itself though, the biofuel model will find itself requiring at least a hundred times as much land as a solar cell based economy. Anyone who has looked at just how much land even the solar cell based economy will require should be terrified of a biofuel based society. We simply do not have enough land to grow both our fuel, and our food unless we drop the world population by at least a factor of ten, probably a factor of a hundred.

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