Making Renewable Propane by E.Coli
Converting
renewable energy into electricity is one thing; converting it into fuel
is quite another. The vast majority of global energy demand is for
fuel, and a renewable source could help us heat our houses and travel
efficiently long into the future. It might even mean we could avoid the
conflicts that will arise while competing for the last remaining fossil
fuels.
Today, we are a step further towards this goal after engineering the gut bacteria E. coli, most famous for the strain of it that causes food poisoning, to make it generate renewable propane. My colleagues and I detail our work in a study published in the journal Nature Communications.
Scientific
advances now mean we can make microbes churn out useful energy, by
changing the way they process energy. These microbes can then convert
the “renewable” sunlight (and carbon dioxide) into fuel, either directly
or using sugar as an intermediate stop-over.
Why propane?
Although
the technology for renewable conversion of solar energy into
electricity already works well, this isn’t quite the same as being
“renewable energy”. Approximately 85% of total energy demand is actually
for fuels, as it is far easier to store energy in fuel rather than as
electricity.
Industrial scale production of cheap renewable fuel
therefore runs into a big problem. It needs to out-compete fossil fuels –
an alternative technology that only needs to pump out the ready
product.
In searching for a renewable fuel process that could be
economically sustainable we focused on propane, a bulk component of
liquid petroleum gas. Propane is an attractive target for several
reasons.
It’s a gas, which means you could immediately separate
the finished product. The microbes who produced the propane would be
left behind and the new fuel will escape as a gas. No need for a messy
separation.
That said, propane also requires little energy to
liquefy, thereby enabling the high-energy density storage that is
required for cost-effective usage. There’s a reason your car’s gas tank
is actually full of liquid – gas simply takes up too much room.
The
fact propane is already in commercial use also helps. It’s used as a
fuel in rural areas or in industry, and sometimes also for transport. In
Italy, for example, thousands of stations sell propane-containing
mixtures under the label “Autogas”.
Making renewable propane
You
can’t make renewable propane through natural reactions – no organisms
naturally pump out propane in the way humans breathe out CO2
or trees exhale oxygen. We therefore turned to synthetic biology, where
biology meets engineering, in order to create such a capability.
US Department of Health
We chose E. coli because it is easy to engineer. Left to its own devices, E. coli
takes glucose from its surroundings and breaks it down into smaller
carbon molecules, electrons and “internal” chemical energy. These
smaller parts are used only as building blocks for cellular growth – to
reproduce.
In the engineered cells, however, we hijack the
assembly line for one of those building blocks known as “fatty acid
synthesis”. Fatty acids are normally synthesised mainly in order to
generate cell membranes but, by introducing a special enzyme, we can
redirect it to instead release butyric acid, the precursor for propane.
From there, only two more enzymes were needed in order to convert this smelly fatty acid into propane.
All in all, this was achieved by introducing only five genes — a very,
very tiny fraction of the more than 4,000 genes present in the entire
genome of E. coli.
Our work represents a proof-of-concept
for renewable fuel development as we deliberately selected a process
that considers all steps of the pathway from production to utilisation.
All in order to maximise chances of commercial production.
At the end of the day, that is what is most important – to enable sustainable and renewable conversion of sunlight and CO2 into fuel, with minimal impact on the environment.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
Comments
Post a Comment