Author
Listed:
- Satoshi Yuzawa
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Joint BioEnegy Institute
The University of Tokyo)
- Mona Mirsiaghi
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Renee Jocic
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Tatsuya Fujii
(Joint BioEnegy Institute
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology)
- Fabrice Masson
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Veronica T. Benites
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Joint BioEnegy Institute)
- Edward E. K. Baidoo
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Joint BioEnegy Institute)
- Eric Sundstrom
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Deepti Tanjore
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Todd R. Pray
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Anthe George
(Joint BioEnegy Institute
Sandia National Laboratory)
- Ryan W. Davis
(Sandia National Laboratory)
- John M. Gladden
(Joint BioEnegy Institute
Sandia National Laboratory)
- Blake A. Simmons
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Joint BioEnegy Institute)
- Leonard Katz
(Joint BioEnegy Institute
University of California)
- Jay D. Keasling
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Joint BioEnegy Institute
University of California
University of California)
Abstract
Microbial production of fuels and commodity chemicals has been performed primarily using natural or slightly modified enzymes, which inherently limits the types of molecules that can be produced. Type I modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) are multi-domain enzymes that can produce unique and diverse molecular structures by combining particular types of catalytic domains in a specific order. This catalytic mechanism offers a wealth of engineering opportunities. Here we report engineered microbes that produce various short-chain (C5–C7) ketones using hybrid PKSs. Introduction of the genes into the chromosome of Streptomyces albus enables it to produce >1 g · l−1 of C6 and C7 ethyl ketones and several hundred mg · l−1 of C5 and C6 methyl ketones from plant biomass hydrolysates. Engine tests indicate these short-chain ketones can be added to gasoline as oxygenates to increase the octane of gasoline. Together, it demonstrates the efficient and renewable microbial production of biogasolines by hybrid enzymes.
Suggested Citation
Satoshi Yuzawa & Mona Mirsiaghi & Renee Jocic & Tatsuya Fujii & Fabrice Masson & Veronica T. Benites & Edward E. K. Baidoo & Eric Sundstrom & Deepti Tanjore & Todd R. Pray & Anthe George & Ryan W. Dav, 2018.
"Short-chain ketone production by engineered polyketide synthases in Streptomyces albus,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-8, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-07040-0
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07040-0
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