4.8 Article

Building carbon-carbon bonds using a biocatalytic methanol condensation cycle

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1413470111

Keywords

methanol metabolism; metabolic engineering; cell-free synthesis; bio-ethanol; bio-butanol

Funding

  1. Reducing Emissions using Methanotrophic Organisms for Transportation Energy (REMOTE) program of the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy [DE-AR0000430]
  2. National Science Foundation [0963183]

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Methanol is an important intermediate in the utilization of natural gas for synthesizing other feedstock chemicals. Typically, chemical approaches for building C-C bonds from methanol require high temperature and pressure. Biological conversion of methanol to longer carbon chain compounds is feasible; however, the natural biological pathways for methanol utilization involve carbon dioxide loss or ATP expenditure. Here we demonstrated a biocatalytic pathway, termed the methanol condensation cycle (MCC), by combining the nonoxidative glycolysis with the ribulose monophosphate pathway to convert methanol to higher-chain alcohols or other acetyl-CoA derivatives using enzymatic reactions in a carbon-conserved and ATP-independent system. We investigated the robustness of MCC and identified operational regions. We confirmed that the pathway forms a catalytic cycle through C-13-carbon labeling. With a cell-free system, we demonstrated the conversion of methanol to ethanol or n-butanol. The high carbon efficiency and low operating temperature are attractive for transforming natural gas-derived methanol to longer-chain liquid fuels and other chemical derivatives.

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