Return to search

Acetate metabolism in Geobacillus thermoglucosidasius and strain engineering for enhanced bioethanol production

Social, economic and political pressures have driven the development of renewable alternatives to fossil fuels. Biofuels, such as bioethanol, have proved to be successful alternatives. Mature technologies are crop-based, but this has brought criticism due to the conflicting use of land for fuel versus food production. Therefore, bioethanol production technologies have shifted to utilising the sugars that derive from the degradation of lignocellulosic biomass. The thermophilic, Gram-positive bacterium, Geobacillus thermoglucosidasius, can naturally utilise a large fraction of these sugars, and metabolic engineering has been used to create a strain that produces ethanol as the major product of fermentation. This strain, G. thermoglucosidasius TM242 (Δldh, Δpfl, pdhup), does however, produce small but significant quantities of acetate, an undesirable by-product of fermentation. Therefore, acetate metabolism in the G. thermoglucosidasius TM242 strain was the focus of this study. During fermentation, ethanol is generated from the central metabolite acetyl-CoA through the activities of a bifunctional enzyme: aldehyde dehydrogenase/alcohol dehydrogenase (ADHE). On the other hand, acetate is generated from acetyl-CoA through catalysis by phosphotransacetylase (PTA) and acetate kinase (AK). Acetate metabolism in G. thermoglucosidasius TM242 was studied in this project by investigating the enzyme activities governing flux from acetyl-CoA, and the feasibility of reduced acetate production was investigated by a pta-deletion strategy. This thesis reports the characterisation of PTA and AK, by studying activities from both native cell lysates and recombinantly expressed proteins. The results indicate that the activities of PTA and AK are greater than those of ADHE, suggesting that the potential metabolic flux is greater towards acetate production than to ethanol. However, the ethanol yield from G. thermoglucosidasius TM242 fermentations is greater than that of acetate, suggesting the existence of a regulatory mechanism controlling acetyl-CoA flux. Several possible regulatory mechanisms were studied in this project and are reported here. The viability of creating a strain that reduces acetate accumulation, and potentially increases ethanol yields, was investigated and reported in this thesis. The gene encoding PTA was deleted from G. thermoglucosidasius TM242, and the resulting strain was characterised. The Δpta strain had approximately 5% of the PTA activity measured in TM242, but acetate was still generated from pentose and hexose fermentations. Additional phosphotransacylase (PTAC) enzymes were discovered in G. thermoglucosidasius TM242 that could catalyse the conversion of acetyl-CoA and orthophosphate to acetyl-phosphate and CoA. A series of PTAC null strains were created and analysed, the results of which indicated that phosphotransbutyrylase (PTB) could be involved in acetate production in vivo. It was discovered that the cell lysates of G. thermoglucosidasius strains carrying deletions to both pta and ptb could no longer catalyse the conversion of acetyl-CoA and orthophosphate to acetyl-phosphate and CoA. However, these strains still accumulated acetate, suggesting the presence of alternative acetate-producing pathways in this organism. In addition, G. thermoglucosidasius strains carrying deletions to both pta and ptb could ferment glucose but not xylose, suggesting that the production of ATP by the PTA-AK pathway is crucial for micro-aerobic growth on pentose sugars.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:665397
Date January 2015
CreatorsHills, Christopher
ContributorsDanson, Michael
PublisherUniversity of Bath
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation

Page generated in 0.0017 seconds