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A miniaturized feedstocks-to-fuels pipeline for screening the efficiency of deconstruction and microbial conversion of lignocellulosic biomass.

Authors :
Pidatala, Venkataramana
Pidatala, Venkataramana
Lei, Mengziang
Choudhary, Hemant
Petzold, Christopher
Garcia Martin, Hector
Simmons, Blake
Gladden, John
Rodriguez, Alberto
Pidatala, Venkataramana
Pidatala, Venkataramana
Lei, Mengziang
Choudhary, Hemant
Petzold, Christopher
Garcia Martin, Hector
Simmons, Blake
Gladden, John
Rodriguez, Alberto
Source :
PLoS ONE; vol 19, iss 10
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Sustainably grown biomass is a promising alternative to produce fuels and chemicals and reduce the dependency on fossil energy sources. However, the efficient conversion of lignocellulosic biomass into biofuels and bioproducts often requires extensive testing of components and reaction conditions used in the pretreatment, saccharification, and bioconversion steps. This restriction can result in a significant and unwieldy number of combinations of biomass types, solvents, microbial strains, and operational parameters that need to be characterized, turning these efforts into a daunting and time-consuming task. Here we developed a high-throughput feedstocks-to-fuels screening platform to address these challenges. The result is a miniaturized semi-automated platform that leverages the capabilities of a solid handling robot, a liquid handling robot, analytical instruments, and a centralized data repository, adapted to operate as an ionic-liquid-based biomass conversion pipeline. The pipeline was tested by using sorghum as feedstock, the biocompatible ionic liquid cholinium phosphate as pretreatment solvent, a one-pot process configuration that does not require ionic liquid removal after pretreatment, and an engineered strain of the yeast Rhodosporidium toruloides that produces the jet-fuel precursor bisabolene as a conversion microbe. By the simultaneous processing of 48 samples, we show that this configuration and reaction conditions result in sugar yields (~70%) and bisabolene titers (~1500 mg/L) that are comparable to the efficiencies observed at larger scales but require only a fraction of the time. We expect that this Feedstocks-to-Fuels pipeline will become an effective tool to screen thousands of bioenergy crop and feedstock samples and assist process optimization efforts and the development of predictive deconstruction approaches.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PLoS ONE; vol 19, iss 10
Notes :
application/pdf, PLoS ONE vol 19, iss 10
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1468510337
Document Type :
Electronic Resource