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117,736 result(s) for "Carbon sources"
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Dawn of the solar age : an end to global warming and to fear
The sun is heating the planet, with fossil fuels adding to global warming, yet is also a source of alternative fuels.
From Acetate to Bio-Based Products: Underexploited Potential for Industrial Biotechnology
Currently, most biotechnological products are based on microbial conversion of carbohydrate substrates that are predominantly generated from sugar- or starch-containing plants. However, direct competitive uses of these feedstocks in the food and feed industry represent a dilemma, so using alternative carbon sources has become increasingly important in industrial biotechnology. A promising alternative carbon source that may be generated in substantial amounts from lignocellulosic biomass and C1 gases is acetate. This review discusses the underexploited potential of acetate to become a next-generation platform substrate in future industrial biotechnology and summarizes alternative sources and routes for acetate production. Furthermore, biotechnological aspects of microbial acetate utilization and the state of the art of biotechnological acetate conversion into value-added bioproducts are highlighted. The search for alternative carbon sources in industrial biotechnology is driven by the competing use of commonly used sugar-based substrates in the food and feed industry.Acetate represents a highly attractive, alternative microbial carbon source for industrial biotechnology.The most interesting routes to alternatively generate acetate comprise the depolymerization of lignocellulosic materials and the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway of acetogenic bacteria to produce acetate as the main product via gas fermentation, microbial electrosynthesis, or microbial photosynthesis.Acetate and acetate-containing streams have emerged as promising carbon sources for microorganisms to produce a variety of value-added bioproducts, such as platform chemicals (e.g., succinic acid), microbial lipids, bioplastics (e.g., polyhydroxyalkanoates), and biosurfactants (e.g., rhamnolipids).
Transitioning to a prosperous, resilient and carbon-free economy : a guide for decision makers
\"This book is a comprehensive manual for policy-makers addressing the issues around human-caused climate change, which threatens communities with increasing extreme weather events, sea-level rise and declining habitability of some regions due to desertification or inundation. The book looks at both mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and global warming and adaption to changing conditions as the climate changes. It encourages the early adoption of climate change measures that this can be achieved while maintaining prosperity. The book takes a sector-by-sector approach, starting with energy and includes cities, industry, natural resources and agriculture, enabling practitioners to focus on actions relevant to their field. It uses case studies across a range of countries, and various industries, to illustrate the opportunities available. Blending technological insights with economics and energy policy, the book presents the tools decision makers need to achieve rapid decarbonisation, whilst unlocking and maintaining productivity, profit and growth\"-- Provided by publisher.
Macrofaunal control of microbial community structure in continental margin sediments
Through a process called “bioturbation,” burrowing macrofauna have altered the seafloor habitat and modified global carbon cycling since the Cambrian. However, the impact of macrofauna on the community structure of microorganisms is poorly understood. Here, we show that microbial communities across bioturbated, but geochemically and sedimentologically divergent, continental margin sites are highly similar but differ clearly from those in nonbioturbated surface and underlying subsurface sediments. Solidand solute-phase geochemical analyses combined with modeled bioturbation activities reveal that dissolved O₂ introduction by burrow ventilation is the major driver of archaeal community structure. By contrast, solid-phase reworking, which regulates the distribution of fresh, algal organic matter, is the main control of bacterial community structure. In nonbioturbated surface sediments and in subsurface sediments, bacterial and archaeal communities are more divergent between locations and appear mainly driven by sitespecific differences in organic carbon sources.
Bacterial Cellulose: Production, Modification and Perspectives in Biomedical Applications
Bacterial cellulose (BC) is ultrafine, nanofibrillar material with an exclusive combination of properties such as high crystallinity (84%–89%) and polymerization degree, high surface area (high aspect ratio of fibers with diameter 20–100 nm), high flexibility and tensile strength (Young modulus of 15–18 GPa), high water-holding capacity (over 100 times of its own weight), etc. Due to high purity, i.e., absence of lignin and hemicellulose, BC is considered as a non-cytotoxic, non-genotoxic and highly biocompatible material, attracting interest in diverse areas with hallmarks in medicine. The presented review summarizes the microbial aspects of BC production (bacterial strains, carbon sources and media) and versatile in situ and ex situ methods applied in BC modification, especially towards bionic design for applications in regenerative medicine, from wound healing and artificial skin, blood vessels, coverings in nerve surgery, dura mater prosthesis, arterial stent coating, cartilage and bone repair implants, etc. The paper concludes with challenges and perspectives in light of further translation in highly valuable medical products.
Agricultural carbon emissions in Zhejiang Province, China (2001–2020): changing trends, influencing factors, and has it achieved synergy with food security and economic development?
Given the huge carbon footprint of agricultural activities, reduction in agricultural carbon emission (ACE) is important to achieve China’s carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals, but it may affect agricultural food security and economic development. Therefore, it is important for scientific carbon reduction measures to understand the multi-year trends and the influencing factors of ACE, and clarify whether the process of ACE affects food security and economic development. This study analyzed the trends of total ACE and ACE caused by different agricultural carbon sources (ACS) from 2001 to 2020 in Zhejiang Province, then we revealed the main influencing factors of ACE based on the logarithmic mean Divisia index (LMDI) model and dissected the relationship between ACE and food security and economic development. Results show that the total ACE fluctuated from 6.10 Mt in 2001 to 3.93 Mt in 2020, and the process included a decrease in 2001–2003 and 2005–2020 and an increase in 2003–2005. The decrease in ACE, from 2001 to 2014, was mainly due to the decline in rice acreage, which contributed 90.38%; from 2014 to 2020, it was by the reduction in the use of fertilizer, diesel, and pesticide, which contributed 83.9%. As drivers, agricultural economic development effect and total population size effect drove 4.25 and 1.54 Mt of ACE, respectively. As inhibitors, planting structure effect, technology development effect, and population structure effect inhibited 3.12, 2.11, and 2.74 Mt of ACE, respectively. With the reduction of ACE, the agricultural economy continued to grow, but the food security situation was pessimistic, indicating that ACE reduction has achieved synergy with economic development, but not with food security.
Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1 growth performance and lipid accumulation on different carbon sources
Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1 is a microorganism with the potential to produce storage lipids. Here, a systematic study was carried out to evaluate growth performance and accumulation of wax esters and triacylglycerols using glycerol, xylose, glucose, acetate, ethanol, and pyruvate as carbon sources. High specific growth rates (μ) were found in gluconeogenic carbon sources (ethanol, acetate, and pyruvate: 0.94 ± 0.18, 0.93 ± 0.06, and 0.61 ± 0.01 h −1 , respectively), and low in glucose (0.25 ± 0.01 h −1 ). Interestingly, these μ values were sustained in a broad range of concentrations of glucose (0.5–50 g L −1 ), pyruvate (3–10 g L −1 ), and acetate (0.3–2 g L −1 ), suggesting a high tolerance to glucose and pyruvate. It was observed that ADP1 is not able to use glycerol or xylose as unique carbon sources. On the other hand, ADP1 showed sensitivity to osmotic upshifts, noted by the lysis at the beginning of cultivations on different carbon sources. However, ADP1 is adapted to relatively high substrate concentrations as indicated by the minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) determined at 24 h of cultivations: 350, 50, 80, and 15 g L −1 for glucose, ethanol, pyruvate, and acetate, respectively. Remarkably, ADP1 co-utilized glucose, acetate, ethanol, and pyruvate. Finally, the accumulation of storage lipids, wax esters (WEs), and triacylglycerols (TAGs) showed to be substrate dependent. Under nitrogen-limiting conditions, the TAGs:WEs (mol:mol) accumulation ratios were 1:4.9 in pyruvate and 1:1.6 in glucose, the WEs were mainly accumulated in acetate. In ethanol, no accumulation of lipids was detected.
Rhodosporidium toruloides: a new platform organism for conversion of lignocellulose into terpene biofuels and bioproducts
Background:Economical conversion of lignocellulosic biomass into biofuels and bioproducts is central to the establishment of a robust bioeconomy. This requires a conversion host that is able to both efficiently assimilate the major lignocellulose-derived carbon sources and divert their metabolites toward specific bioproducts.Results:In this study, the carotenogenic yeast Rhodosporidium toruloides was examined for its ability to convert lignocellulose into two non-native sesquiterpenes with biofuel (bisabolene) and pharmaceutical (amorphadiene) applications. We found that R. toruloides can efficiently convert a mixture of glucose and xylose from hydrolyzed lignocellulose into these bioproducts, and unlike many conventional production hosts, its growth and productivity were enhanced in lignocellulosic hydrolysates relative to purified substrates. This organism was demonstrated to havesuperior growth in corn stover hydrolysates prepared by two different pretreatment methods, one using a novel bio-compatible ionic liquid (IL) choline α-ketoglutarate, which produced 261 mg/L of bisabolene at bench scale, and the other using an alkaline pretreatment, which produced 680 mg/L of bisabolene in a high-gravity fed-batch bioreactor. Interestingly, R. toruloides was also observed to assimilate p-coumaric acid liberated from acylated grass lignin in the IL hydrolysate, a finding we verified with purified substrates. R. toruloides was also able to consume several additional compounds with aromatic motifs similar to lignin monomers, suggesting that this organism may have the metabolic potential to convert depolymerized lignin streams alongside lignocellulosic sugars.Conclusions:This study highlights the natural compatibility of R. toruloides with bioprocess conditions relevant to lignocellulosic biorefineries and demonstrates its ability to produce non-native terpenes.
Recent progress in melt pyrolysis: Fabrication and applications of high‐value carbon materials from abundant sources
The escalating demand for sophisticated carbon products, including carbon black, carbon nanotubes (CNTs), and graphene, has yet to be adequately addressed by conventional techniques with respect to large‐scale, efficient, and controllable carbon material synthesis. Molten pyrolysis emerges as a propitious strategy for generating such high‐value carbon materials. Abundant carbon sources encompassing methane (CH 4 ), carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), biomass, and plastics can undergo thermal decomposition into carbon constituents within molten metal or salt media. This methodology not only obviates dependence on traditional fossil fuels but additionally enables modulation of carbon material morphologies by varying the molten media, thereby presenting substantial potential for effective and controlled carbon material fabrication. In this review, we examine the capacity of molten pyrolysis in producing high‐value carbon materials derived from CH 4 , CO 2 , biomass, and plastics. Concurrently, we present a detailed overview of the potential applications of this novel methodology, particularly emphasizing its relevance in the fields of supercapacitors, flexible materials, and electrochemical cells. Furthermore, we contemplate future trajectories for molten pyrolysis, accentuating that amalgamation with auxiliary processes or technologies—like renewable energy systems and carbon capture and storage—represents a remarkably promising route for continued investigation.
Nitrogen regulator GlnR controls uptake and utilization of non-phosphotransferase-system carbon sources in actinomycetes
The regulatory mechanisms underlying the uptake and utilization of multiple types of carbohydrates in actinomycetes remain poorly understood. In this study, we show that GlnR (central regulator of nitrogen metabolism) serves as a universal regulator of nitrogen metabolism and plays an important, previously unknown role in controlling the transport of non-phosphotransferase-system (PTS) carbon sources in actinomycetes. It was observed that GlnR can directly interact with the promoters of most (13 of 20) carbohydrate ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter loci and can activate the transcription of these genes in response to nitrogen availability in industrial, erythromycin-producingSaccharopolyspora erythraea. Deletion of theglnRgene resulted in severe growth retardation under the culture conditions used, with select ABC-transported carbohydrates (maltose, sorbitol, mannitol, cellobiose, trehalose, or mannose) used as the sole carbon source. Furthermore, we found that GlnR-mediated regulation of carbohydrate transport was highly conserved in actinomycetes. These results demonstrate that GlnR serves a role beyond nitrogen metabolism, mediating critical functions in carbon metabolism and crosstalk of nitrogen- and carbon-metabolism pathways in response to the nutritional states of cells. These findings provide insights into the molecular regulation of transport and metabolism of non-PTS carbohydrates and reveal potential applications for the cofermentation of biomass-derived sugars in the production of biofuels and bio-based chemicals.