Bacteria Engineered to Turn Carbon Dioxide Into Liquid Fuel
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Global climate change has prompted efforts to drastically reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas produced by burning fossil fuels.
In a new approach, researchers from the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have genetically modified a cyanobacterium to consume carbon dioxide and produce the liquid fuel isobutanol, which holds great potential as a gasoline alternative. The reaction is powered directly by energy from sunlight, through photosynthesis.
The research appears in the Dec. 9 print edition of the journal Nature Biotechnology and is available online.
This new method has two advantages for the long-term, global-scale goal of achieving a cleaner and greener energy economy, the researchers say. First, it recycles carbon dioxide, reducing greenhouse gas emissions resulting from the burning of fossil fuels. Second, it uses solar energy to convert the carbon dioxide into a liquid fuel that can be used in the existing energy infrastructure, including in most automobiles.
While other alternatives to gasoline include deriving biofuels from plants or from algae, both of these processes require several intermediate steps before refinement into usable fuels.
“This new approach avoids the need for biomass deconstruction, either in the case of cellulosic biomass or algal biomass, which is a major economic barrier for biofuel production,” said team leader James C. Liao, Chancellor’s Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at UCLA and associate director of the UCLA-Department of Energy Institute for Genomics and Proteomics. “Therefore, this is potentially much more efficient and less expensive than the current approach.”
Using the cyanobacterium Synechoccus elongatus, researchers first genetically increased the quantity of the carbon dioxide-fixing enzyme RuBisCO. Then they spliced genes from other microorganisms to engineer a strain that intakes carbon dioxide and sunlight and produces isobutyraldehyde gas. The low boiling point and high vapor pressure of the gas allows it to easily be stripped from the system.
The engineered bacteria can produce isobutanol directly, but researchers say it is currently easier to use an existing and relatively inexpensive chemical catalysis process to convert isobutyraldehyde gas to isobutanol, as well as other useful petroleum-based products.
In addition to Liao, the research team included lead author Shota Atsumi, a former UCLA postdoctoral scholar now on the UC Davis faculty, and UCLA postdoctoral scholar Wendy Higashide.
An ideal place for this system would be next to existing power plants that emit carbon dioxide, the researchers say, potentially allowing the greenhouse gas to be captured and directly recycled into liquid fuel.
“We are continuing to improve the rate and yield of the production,” Liao said. “Other obstacles include the efficiency of light distribution and reduction of bioreactor cost. We are working on solutions to these problems.”
The research was supported in part by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/12/091210162222.htm
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January 1, 2010 am31 5:34 pm
global warming is not caused by CO2.
man made global warming is a lie. a hoax to provide the reason for tyrannical global government & global carbon tax & ‘cap & trade’ which will be an instrument of control & impoverishment & genocide.
The EU, UN, IMF, IPCC must be opposed & removed from power by the people the seek to terrorise.
Rise up in LOVE in 2010. Oppose & subvert the fascist NWO. Take your power back & cease to be obedient.
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BOYCOTT WORK TOGETHER EN MASSE.
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LOVE TO ALL
XXX
January 5, 2010 am31 6:46 pm
I think this is a good thing happening to help lower the CO2 emissions and consentrations but what are the possible effects of this bacteria getting out ot control.
I do believe that the CO2 level is on the rise and is caused by the burning of fossil fuels but this doesn’t explain why several if not all of the rest of the planets in this solar system are also warming up.
January 25, 2010 am31 2:07 am
This will help earth to reduce the greenhouse gas effect to the ozone layer. Global warming is a serious topic today powerful countries are now a having a talk a bout the climate change and how disastrous it is.