4.7 Review

An updated review on advancement in fermentative production strategies for biobutanol using Clostridium spp.

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 32, Pages 47988-48019

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-20637-9

Keywords

ABE fermentation; Biofuel; Fermentation technology; In situ product recovery; Metabolic engineering; n-Butanol; Renewable substrates; Strain improvement

Funding

  1. KSTePS, Department of Science and Technology (DST), Govt. of Karnataka

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This paper discusses the sustainable production of biobutanol as a green fuel alternative to gasoline. Key issues include developing high-yield biobutanol strains, finding renewable biomass for large-scale production, and addressing limitations in traditional fermentation processes to improve biobutanol synthesis efficiency.
A significant concern of our fuel-dependent era is the unceasing exhaustion of petroleum fuel supplies. In parallel to this, environmental issues such as the greenhouse effect, change in global climate, and increasing global temperature must be addressed on a priority basis. Biobutanol, which has fuel characteristics comparable to gasoline, has attracted global attention as a viable green fuel alternative among the many biofuel alternatives. Renewable biomass could be used for the sustainable production of biobutanol by the acetone-butanol-ethanol (ABE) pathway. Non-extinguishable resources, such as algal and lignocellulosic biomass, and starch are some of the most commonly used feedstock for fermentative production of biobutanol, and each has its particular set of advantages. Clostridium, a gram-positive endospore-forming bacterium that can produce a range of compounds, along with n-butanol is traditionally known for its biobutanol production capabilities. Clostridium fermentation produces biobased n-butanol through ABE fermentation. However, low butanol titer, a lack of suitable feedstock, and product inhibition are the primary difficulties in biobutanol synthesis. Critical issues that are essential for sustainable production of biobutanol include (i) developing high butanol titer producing strains utilizing genetic and metabolic engineering approaches, (ii) renewable biomass that could be used for biobutanol production at a larger scale, and (iii) addressing the limits of traditional batch fermentation by integrated bioprocessing technologies with effective product recovery procedures that have increased the efficiency of biobutanol synthesis. Our paper reviews the current progress in all three aspects of butanol production and presents recent data on current practices in fermentative biobutanol production technology.

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