• About us
  • Contact
Friday, June 2, 2023
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Times Of Nation
-18 °c
  • Top Stories
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

    JWST Scans an Ultra-Hot Jupiter’s Atmosphere

    JWST Scans an Ultra-Hot Jupiter’s Atmosphere

    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

  • Physics
    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Trending Tags

    • geophysics
    • quantum
    • physicists
    • physiology
    • physical
    • holography
  • Top Stories
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

    JWST Scans an Ultra-Hot Jupiter’s Atmosphere

    JWST Scans an Ultra-Hot Jupiter’s Atmosphere

    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

  • Physics
    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Trending Tags

    • geophysics
    • quantum
    • physicists
    • physiology
    • physical
    • holography
No Result
View All Result
Times Of Nation
No Result
View All Result
bayan çanta
Home Genetics

Engineered yeast could expand biofuels’ reach

by TimesOfNation
September 11, 2021
in Genetics
Engineered yeast could expand biofuels’ reach
1
SHARES
8
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Engineered yeast could expand biofuels’ reach- Times Of Nation

Boosting production of biofuels such as ethanol could be an important step toward reducing global consumption of fossil fuels. However, ethanol production is limited in large part by its reliance on corn, which isn’t grown in large enough quantities to make up a significant portion of U.S. fuel needs.

To try to expand biofuels’ potential impact, a team of MIT engineers has now found a way to expand the use of a wider range of nonfood feedstocks to produce such fuels. At the moment, feedstocks such as straw and woody plants are difficult to use for biofuel production  because they first need to be broken down to fermentable sugars, a process that releases numerous byproducts that are toxic to yeast, the microbes most commonly used to produce biofuels.

The MIT researchers developed a way to circumvent that toxicity, making it feasible to use those sources, which are much more plentiful, to produce biofuels. They also showed that this tolerance can be engineered into strains of yeast used to manufacture other chemicals, potentially making it possible to use ‘cellulosic’ woody plant material as a source to make biodiesel or bioplastics.

‘What we really want to do is open cellulose feedstocks to almost any product and take advantage of the sheer abundance that cellulose offers,’ says Felix Lam, an MIT research associate and the lead author of the new study.

Gregory Stephanopoulos, the Willard Henry Dow Professor in Chemical Engineering, and Gerald Fink, the Margaret and Herman Sokol Professor at the Whitehead Institute of Biomedical Research and the American Cancer Society Professor of Genetics in MIT’s Department of Biology, are the senior authors of the paper, which appears today in Science Advances.

Boosting tolerance

Currently, around 40 percent of the U.S. corn harvest goes into ethanol. Corn is primarily a food crop that requires a great deal of water and fertilizer, so plant material known as cellulosic biomass is considered an attractive, noncompeting source for renewable fuels and chemicals. This biomass, which includes many types of straw, and parts of the corn plant that typically go unused, could amount to more than 1 billion tons of material per year, according to a U.S. Department of Energy study — enough to substitute for 30 to 50 percent of the petroleum used for transportation.

However, two major obstacles to using cellulosic biomass are that cellulose first needs to be liberated from the woody lignin, and the cellulose then needs to be further broken down into simple sugars that yeast can use. The particularly aggressive preprocessing needed generates compounds called aldehydes, which are very reactive and can kill yeast cells.

To overcome this, the MIT team built on a technique they had developed several years ago to improve yeast cells’ tolerance to a wide range of alcohols, which are also toxic to yeast in large quantities. In that study, they showed that spiking the bioreactor with specific compounds that strengthen the membrane of the yeast helped yeast to survive much longer in high concentrations of ethanol. Using this approach, they were able to improve the traditional fuel ethanol yield of a high-performing strain of yeast by about 80 percent.

In their new study, the researchers engineered yeast so that they could convert the cellulosic byproduct aldehydes into alcohols, allowing them to take advantage of the alcohol tolerance strategy they had already developed. They tested several naturally occurring enzymes that perform this reaction, from several species of yeast, and identified one that worked the best. Then, they used directed evolution to further improve it.

‘This enzyme converts aldehydes into alcohols, and we have shown that yeast can be made a lot more tolerant of alcohols as a class than it is of aldehydes, using the other methods we have developed,’ Stephanopoulos says.

Yeast are generally not very efficient at producing ethanol from toxic cellulosic feedstocks; however, when the researchers expressed this top-performing enzyme and spiked the reactor with the membrane-strengthening additives, the strain more than tripled its cellulosic ethanol production, to levels matching traditional corn ethanol.

Abundant feedstocks

The researchers demonstrated that they could achieve high yields of ethanol with five different types of cellulosic feedstocks, including switchgrass, wheat straw, and corn stover (the leaves, stalks, and husks left behind after the corn is harvested).

‘With our engineered strain, you can essentially get maximum cellulosic fermentation from all these feedstocks that are usually very toxic,’ Lam says. ‘The great thing about this is it doesn’t matter if maybe one season your corn residues aren’t that great. You can switch to energy straws, or if you don’t have high availability of straws, you can switch to some sort of pulpy, woody residue.’
 

The researchers also engineered their aldehyde-to-ethanol enzyme into a strain of yeast that has been engineered to produce lactic acid, a precursor to bioplastics. As it did with ethanol, this strain was able to produce the same yield of lactic acid from cellulosic materials as it does from corn.

This demonstration suggests that it could be feasible to engineer aldehyde tolerance into strains of yeast that generate other products such as diesel. Biodiesels could potentially have a big impact on industries such as heavy trucking, shipping, or aviation, which lack an emission-free alternative like electrification and require huge amounts of fossil fuel.

‘Now we have a tolerance module that you can bolt on to almost any sort of production pathway,’ Stephanopoulos says. ‘Our goal is to extend this technology to other organisms that are better suited for the production of these heavy fuels, like oils, diesel, and jet fuel.’

The research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Institutes of Health.

(News Source -Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Times Of Nation staff and is published from a news.mit.edu feed.)

RelatedArticles

River erosion can shape fish evolution, study suggests

Exploring the links between diet and cancer

MIT community members who work to eradicate sexual violence recognized at 2023 Change-Maker Awards

Read Also- Latest News | Current Affairs News | Today News | English News | World News Today

TimesofNation.com offer news and information like- English newspaper today | today English news | English news live | times India | today news in English in India | breaking news in India today | India TV news today & Hindustan News.

You can Read on TimesofNation.com latest news today, breaking news headlines, Top news. Discover national and international news on economy, politics, defence, sports, world news & other relatively current affair’s news.

Tags: biofuelbiofuelscelluloseEngineeredexpandFelix LamGerald FinkGregory Stephanopoulosreachyeast
Plugin Install : Subscribe Push Notification need OneSignal plugin to be installed.
TimesOfNation

TimesOfNation

Related Posts

If the Higgs can reach the Hidden Valley, we will see new physics in next-generation accelerators

If the Higgs can reach the Hidden Valley, we will see new physics in next-generation accelerators

by TimesOfNation
May 18, 2023
1

If the Higgs can reach the Hidden Valley, we will see new physics in next-generation accelerators- Times Of Nation The...

Five MIT faculty elected to the National Academy of Sciences for 2023

Five MIT faculty elected to the National Academy of Sciences for 2023

by TimesOfNation
May 12, 2023
6

Five MIT faculty elected to the National Academy of Sciences for 2023- Times Of Nation The National Academy of Sciences...

The mystery of how Mars meteorites reach Earth may finally be solved

The mystery of how Mars meteorites reach Earth may finally be solved

by TimesOfNation
May 10, 2023
2

The mystery of how Mars meteorites reach Earth may finally be solved: Times Of Nation Scientists have discovered that the...

Satellites fail to reach orbit as first launch from UK ends in disappointment – Spaceflight Now

Satellites fail to reach orbit as first launch from UK ends in disappointment – Spaceflight Now

by TimesOfNation
January 18, 2023
1

Satellites fail to reach orbit as first launch from UK ends in disappointment – Spaceflight Now: Times Of Nation Virgin...

New MIT internships expand research opportunities in Africa

New MIT internships expand research opportunities in Africa

by TimesOfNation
January 6, 2023
1

New MIT internships expand research opportunities in Africa- Times Of Nation With new support from the Office of the Associate...

Trapping polaritons in an engineered quantum box: Possible pathway to future, ultra energy-efficient technologies

Trapping polaritons in an engineered quantum box: Possible pathway to future, ultra energy-efficient technologies

by TimesOfNation
October 21, 2022
3

Trapping polaritons in an engineered quantum box- Possible pathway to future, ultra energy-efficient technologies- Times Of Nation Australian researchers have...

Next Post
The power of two

The power of two

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Recommended

A key role for quantum entanglement: Breakthrough in experimental quantum cryptography

A key role for quantum entanglement: Breakthrough in experimental quantum cryptography

10 months ago
4
Researchers develop 3D-printed shape memory alloy with superior superelasticity: 3D printing leads to fabricating a shape memory alloy with increased superelasticity

Researchers develop 3D-printed shape memory alloy with superior superelasticity: 3D printing leads to fabricating a shape memory alloy with increased superelasticity

1 year ago
8

Popular News

  • Petrol, diesel sales soar in May

    Petrol, diesel sales soar in May

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • How disinfecting an old mineshaft saved a colony of little brown bats

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • PM Modi has given honest, corruption-free governance in 9 years, says Anurag Thakur

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Coal India OFS opens for retail investors today; non-retail issue oversubscribed 3.46x at Rs 6,500 cr on Day 1

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

About

Times Of Nation

timesofnation.com is a dedicated news website for core sciences, technology, medical research and health news along with current affairs coverage from India. the timesofnation.com website is one of the fast growing online communities for science-minded people....Read more

Category

  • Business News
  • Environment
  • Genetics
  • India
  • Outer space
  • Physics
  • Wildlife

Site Links

  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

Contact Us

Email us to send your suggestions
editor[@]timesofnation.com
Send articles and news to editor[@]timesofnation.com
For other enquiries: admin[@]timesofnation.com
If you find any content violating the editorial code of conduct mail to editor[@]timesofnation.com.

  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

© 2021 Times of Nation. All rights reserved.

ankara escort çankaya escort çankaya escort escort bayan çankaya istanbul rus escort eryaman escort ankara escort kızılay escort istanbul escort ankara escort ankara escort escort ankara istanbul rus Escort atasehir Escort beylikduzu Escort Ankara Escort malatya Escort kuşadası Escort gaziantep Escort izmir Escort
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
  • Physics

© 2021 Times of Nation. All rights reserved.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.