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Current progress on engineering microbial strains and consortia for production of cellulosic butanol through consolidated bioprocessing

Journal

MICROBIAL BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 238-261

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1751-7915.14148

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The fermentative production of n-butanol has regained interest in recent decades due to its use as a drop-in fuel. Utilizing lignocellulose as a feedstock can increase economic competitiveness, but its high recalcitrance requires pre-treatment and multiple processes. Strategies for developing microbial strains for efficient cellulose depolymerization and butanol production are discussed, along with the challenge of butanol toxicity and strategies for developing tolerant strains.
In the last decades, fermentative production of n-butanol has regained substantial interest mainly owing to its use as drop-in-fuel. The use of lignocellulose as an alternative to traditional acetone-butanol-ethanol fermentation feedstocks (starchy biomass and molasses) can significantly increase the economic competitiveness of biobutanol over production from non-renewable sources (petroleum). However, the low cost of lignocellulose is offset by its high recalcitrance to biodegradation which generally requires chemical-physical pre-treatment and multiple bioreactor-based processes. The development of consolidated processing (i.e., single-pot fermentation) can dramatically reduce lignocellulose fermentation costs and promote its industrial application. Here, strategies for developing microbial strains and consortia that feature both efficient (hemi)cellulose depolymerization and butanol production will be depicted, that is, rational metabolic engineering of native (hemi)cellulolytic or native butanol-producing or other suitable microorganisms; protoplast fusion of (hemi)cellulolytic and butanol-producing strains; and co-culture of (hemi)cellulolytic and butanol-producing microbes. Irrespective of the fermentation feedstock, biobutanol production is inherently limited by the severe toxicity of this solvent that challenges process economic viability. Hence, an overview of strategies for developing butanol hypertolerant strains will be provided.

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