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Microbial production of fuels, commodity chemicals, and materials from sustainable sources of carbon and energy

  • Aidan E. Cowan
  • , Sarah H. Klass
  • , Peter H. Winegar
  • , Jay D. Keasling*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
    • Joint Bioenergy Institute
    • University of California at Berkeley

    Research output: Contribution to journalReviewpeer-review

    76 Downloads (Orbit)

    Abstract

    Anthropogenic carbon emissions are driving rapid changes to the earth's climate, disrupting whole ecosystems and endangering the stability of human society. Innovations in engineered microbial fermentation enable the fossil resource-free production of fuels, commodity chemicals, and materials, thereby reducing the carbon emissions associated with these products. Microorganisms have been engineered to catabolize sustainable sources of carbon and energy (i.e., plant biomass, plastic waste, and one-carbon feedstocks) and biosynthesize carbon-neutral or carbon-negative products. These engineering efforts exploit and optimize natural biological pathways or generate unnatural pathways which can biosynthesize chemicals that have not yet been accessed using synthetic chemistry. Recent advances in microbial fermentation seek not only to maximize the titer, rate, and yield of desired products, but also to tailor microbial catabolism to utilize inexpensive feedstocks. Ultimately, these advances aim to lower the cost of bioproduction so that microorganism-derived chemicals can be economically competitive with fossil-derived chemicals.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number100482
    JournalCurrent Opinion in Systems Biology
    Volume36
    Number of pages10
    ISSN2452-3100
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2023

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 13 - Climate Action
      SDG 13 Climate Action

    Keywords

    • Synthetic biology
    • Metabaolic engineering
    • Engineered microorganisms
    • Microbial fermentation
    • Plant biomass
    • C1 feedstocks
    • Plastic waste
    • Biofuels
    • Biopolymers
    • Biomaterials

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