Microbial electrosynthesis from carbon dioxide feedstock linked to yeast growth for the production of high-value isoprenoids

Yadav, Ravineet ; Chattopadhyay, Banani ; Kiran, Rashmi ; Yadav, Ankit ; Bachhawat, Anand K. ; Patil, Sunil A. (2022) Microbial electrosynthesis from carbon dioxide feedstock linked to yeast growth for the production of high-value isoprenoids Bioresource Technology, 363 . p. 127906. ISSN 0960-8524

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2022.127906

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2022.127906

Abstract

The difficulty in producing multi-carbon and thus high-value chemicals from CO2 is one of the key challenges of microbial electrosynthesis (MES) and other CO2 utilization technologies. Here, we demonstrate a two-stage bioproduction approach to produce terpenoids (>C20) and yeast biomass from CO2 by linking MES and yeast cultivation approaches. In the first stage, CO2 (C1) is converted to acetate (C2) using Clostridium ljungdahlii via MES. The acetate is then directly used as the feedstock to produce sclareol (C20), β-carotene (C40), and yeast biomass using Saccharomyces cerevisiae in the second stage. With the unpurified acetate-containing (1.5 g/L) spent medium from MES reactors, S. cerevisiae produced 0.32 ± 0.04 mg/L β-carotene, 2.54 ± 0.91 mg/L sclareol, and 369.66 ± 41.67 mg/L biomass. The primary economic analysis suggests that sclareol and biomass production is feasible using recombinant S. cerevisiae and non-recombinant S. cerevisiae, respectively, directly from unpurified acetate-containing spent medium of MES.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Science.
Keywords:CO(2) fixation; Electricity-driven biosynthesis; Sclareol; Yeast extract; β-carotene.
ID Code:131203
Deposited On:05 Dec 2022 10:33
Last Modified:05 Dec 2022 10:33

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