1 research outputs found
Co-fermentation of Cellulose and Sucrose/Xylose by Engineered Yeasts for Bioethanol Production
Consolidated
bioprocessing (CBP) of cellulose mixed with fermentable sugar(s) is
considered as a promising alternative to the use of cellulose as sole
substrate for bioethanol production. Our research metabolically engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae to allow for the co-conversion
of cellulose and either sucrose or xylose to bioethanol. Constitutive
promoter substitution and xylose metabolic pathway integration were
carried out in a strain previously modified to express both bifunctional
minicellulosomes by galactose induction and a cellodextrin pathway.
Strain EBY101-CC, engineered for the co-fermentation of cellulose
and sucrose, produced 4.3 g/L ethanol from 10 g/L carboxymethyl cellulose
(CMC) and batch-fed sucrose with an ethanol yield of 0.43 g/g of total
sugars. Strains modified for co-fermentation of xylose and cellulose,
EBY101-X5CC and EBY101-X5CP were able to produce 2.9 g/L cellulosic
ethanol from 8.0 g/L CMC and 1.2 g/L from 3.2 g/L phosphoric acid-swollen
cellulose (PASC), respectively, when xylose was depleted