AI Article Synopsis

  • Bio-refining lignocellulosic resources is a sustainable method for producing biofuels and biochemicals, yet challenges exist in improving conversion efficiency for sugars like xylose and glucose.
  • Researchers engineered the bacterium Bacillus licheniformis to enhance acetoin production, achieving a 19.6% increase in output through adaptive evolution and advanced mutagenesis techniques.
  • The study successfully restructured the xylose uptake pathway, allowing for the co-utilization of xylose and glucose, which led to significant acetoin yields from both types of sugars and highlighted the biotechnological potential for creating valuable chemicals from lignocellulosic waste.

Article Abstract

Bio-refining lignocellulosic resource offers a renewable and sustainable approach for producing biofuels and biochemicals. However, the conversion efficiency of lignocellulosic resource is still challenging due to the intrinsic inefficiency in co-utilization of xylose and glucose. In this study, the industrial bacterium Bacillus licheniformis was engineered for biorefining lignocellulosic resource to produce acetoin. First, adaptive evolution was conducted to improve acetoin tolerance, leading to a 19.6 % increase in acetoin production. Then, ARTP mutagenesis and Co-γ irradiation was carried out to enhance the production of acetoin, obtaining 73.0 g/L acetoin from glucose. Further, xylose uptake and xylose utilization pathway were rewired to facilitate the co-utilization of xylose and glucose, enabling the production of 60.6 g/L acetoin from glucose and xylose mixtures. Finally, this efficient cell factory was utilized for acetoin production from lignocellulosic hydrolysates with the highest titer of 68.3 g/L in fed-batch fermentation. This strategy described here holds great applied potential in the biorefinery of lignocellulose for the efficient synthesis of high-value chemicals.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.135142DOI Listing

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