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Development of cellulosic ethanol production process via co-culturing of artificial cellulosomal Bacillus and kefir yeast

Authors :
Cheng-Yu Ho
Wen-Hsiung Li
Chieh-Chen Huang
Shih-Chi Lee
Tsu-Yuan Chin
Jui-Jen Chang
Ming-Che Shih
Source :
Applied Energy. 100:27-32
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

A novel dual-microbe Bacillus/yeast co-culture system is developed for cellulosic bioethanol production. A recombinant cellulosomal Bacillus subtilis that carries eight cellulosomal genes of Clostridium thermocellum, including one scaffolding protein gene (cipA), one cell-surface anchor gene (sdbA), two exo-glucosidase genes (celK and celS), two endoglucanase genes (celA and celR), and two xylanase genes (xynC and xynZ) was constructed. The partner microbes for the dual-microbe combination are the wild type kefir yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus KY3, K. marxianus KY3-NpaBGS, which carries a β-glucosidase (NpaBGS) gene from rumen fungus, and the K. marxianus KR5 strain, that harbors endoglucanase (egIII), exo-glucanase (cbhI) and NpaBGS genes. All three Bacillus/yeast co-culture systems could achieve the cellulose saccharification and ethanol conversion simultaneously better than KR5 alone. The combination of Bacillus/KY3-NpaBGS outperformed that of Bacillus/KY3, as they could produce β-glucosidase enzyme for the system. Although, KR5 produces two more kinds of cellulases than KY3-NpaBGS. Bacillus/KR5 could not perform better than Bacillus/KY3-NpaBGS. Our results suggest that the dual-microbe Bacillus/yeast co-culturing system could leverage the advantages from both microbes and have a great potential for integrating into consolidated bioprocessing system.

Details

ISSN :
03062619
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Energy
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d501b1a55ee24c4aba13a0c0673fa8cf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2012.03.016