Publications by authors named "Stephen Sarria"

Yeast extract (YE) is a complex nutritional source associated with high performance on microbial production processes. However, its inherent compositional variability challenges its scalability. While prior efforts have focused on growth-associated products, the dynamics of growth-uncoupled production, which leads to higher production rates and conversion yields, still need to be explored.

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Biomanufacturing is emerging as a key technology for the sustainable production of chemicals, materials, and food ingredients using engineered microbes. However, despite billions of dollars of investment, few processes have been successfully commercialized due to a lack of attention on industrial-scale bioprocess design and innovation. In this study, we address this challenge through the development of a novel semi-continuous bioprocess for the production of the terpene amorpha-4,11-diene (AMD4,11) using engineered Escherichia coli.

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Amorpha-4,11-diene (AMD4,11) is a precursor to artemisinin, a potent antimalarial drug that is traditionally extracted from the shrubs of Artemisia annua. Despite significant prior efforts to produce artemisinin and its precursors through biotechnology, there remains a dire need for more efficient biosynthetic routes for its production. Here, we describe the optimization of key process conditions for an Escherichia coli strain producing AMD4,11 via the native methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathway.

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Medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs) are key intermediates in the synthesis of medium-chain chemicals including α-olefins and dicarboxylic acids. In bacteria, microbial production of MCFAs is limited by the activity and product profile of fatty acyl-ACP thioesterases. Here, we engineer a heterologous bacterial medium-chain fatty acyl-ACP thioesterase for improved MCFA production in Escherichia coli.

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Linear, medium-chain (C8-C12) hydrocarbons are important components of fuels as well as commodity and specialty chemicals. As industrial microbes do not contain pathways to produce medium-chain chemicals, approaches such as overexpression of endogenous enzymes or deletion of competing pathways are not available to the metabolic engineer; instead, fatty acid synthesis and reversed β-oxidation are manipulated to synthesize medium-chain chemical precursors. Even so, chain lengths remain difficult to control, which means that purification must be used to obtain the desired products, titers of which are typically low and rarely exceed milligrams per liter.

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The volumetric heating values of today's biofuels are too low to power energy-intensive aircraft, rockets, and missiles. Recently, pinene dimers were shown to have a volumetric heating value similar to that of the tactical fuel JP-10. To provide a sustainable source of pinene, we engineered Escherichia coli for pinene production.

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