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Robust microorganisms for biofuel and chemical production from municipal solid waste
by
Robson, James F.
, McQueen-Mason, Simon J.
, Dornau, Aritha
, Thomas, Gavin H.
in
Alternative energy sources
/ Applied Microbiology
/ Aviation
/ Aviation fuel
/ Biodiesel
/ Biodiesel fuels
/ Bioethanol
/ Biofuels
/ Biomass
/ Biomass energy
/ Biomass energy research
/ Biorefineries
/ Biotechnology
/ Cellulose
/ Chemical plants
/ Chemical properties
/ Chemistry
/ Chemistry and Materials Science
/ E coli
/ Emissions
/ Enzymes
/ Enzymology
/ Escherichia coli
/ Ethanol
/ Fermentation
/ Food
/ Furfural
/ Future predictions
/ Genetic Engineering
/ Glucose
/ Hemicellulose
/ Hydrolysates
/ Hydrolysis
/ Hydroxymethylfurfural
/ Incineration
/ Landfill
/ Landfills
/ Levulinic acid
/ Lignocellulose
/ Metals
/ Methods
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiological synthesis
/ Microbiology
/ Microorganisms
/ Monosaccharides
/ MSW
/ Municipal solid waste
/ Municipal solid wastes
/ Municipal waste management
/ Organic municipal solid waste
/ Phosphates
/ Polysaccharides
/ Production management
/ Raw materials
/ Recycling
/ Rhodococcus opacus
/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae
/ Solid waste management
/ Solid wastes
/ Species
/ Triglycerides
/ Vanillin
/ Waste disposal
/ Waste management
/ Yeast
2020
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Robust microorganisms for biofuel and chemical production from municipal solid waste
by
Robson, James F.
, McQueen-Mason, Simon J.
, Dornau, Aritha
, Thomas, Gavin H.
in
Alternative energy sources
/ Applied Microbiology
/ Aviation
/ Aviation fuel
/ Biodiesel
/ Biodiesel fuels
/ Bioethanol
/ Biofuels
/ Biomass
/ Biomass energy
/ Biomass energy research
/ Biorefineries
/ Biotechnology
/ Cellulose
/ Chemical plants
/ Chemical properties
/ Chemistry
/ Chemistry and Materials Science
/ E coli
/ Emissions
/ Enzymes
/ Enzymology
/ Escherichia coli
/ Ethanol
/ Fermentation
/ Food
/ Furfural
/ Future predictions
/ Genetic Engineering
/ Glucose
/ Hemicellulose
/ Hydrolysates
/ Hydrolysis
/ Hydroxymethylfurfural
/ Incineration
/ Landfill
/ Landfills
/ Levulinic acid
/ Lignocellulose
/ Metals
/ Methods
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiological synthesis
/ Microbiology
/ Microorganisms
/ Monosaccharides
/ MSW
/ Municipal solid waste
/ Municipal solid wastes
/ Municipal waste management
/ Organic municipal solid waste
/ Phosphates
/ Polysaccharides
/ Production management
/ Raw materials
/ Recycling
/ Rhodococcus opacus
/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae
/ Solid waste management
/ Solid wastes
/ Species
/ Triglycerides
/ Vanillin
/ Waste disposal
/ Waste management
/ Yeast
2020
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Robust microorganisms for biofuel and chemical production from municipal solid waste
by
Robson, James F.
, McQueen-Mason, Simon J.
, Dornau, Aritha
, Thomas, Gavin H.
in
Alternative energy sources
/ Applied Microbiology
/ Aviation
/ Aviation fuel
/ Biodiesel
/ Biodiesel fuels
/ Bioethanol
/ Biofuels
/ Biomass
/ Biomass energy
/ Biomass energy research
/ Biorefineries
/ Biotechnology
/ Cellulose
/ Chemical plants
/ Chemical properties
/ Chemistry
/ Chemistry and Materials Science
/ E coli
/ Emissions
/ Enzymes
/ Enzymology
/ Escherichia coli
/ Ethanol
/ Fermentation
/ Food
/ Furfural
/ Future predictions
/ Genetic Engineering
/ Glucose
/ Hemicellulose
/ Hydrolysates
/ Hydrolysis
/ Hydroxymethylfurfural
/ Incineration
/ Landfill
/ Landfills
/ Levulinic acid
/ Lignocellulose
/ Metals
/ Methods
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiological synthesis
/ Microbiology
/ Microorganisms
/ Monosaccharides
/ MSW
/ Municipal solid waste
/ Municipal solid wastes
/ Municipal waste management
/ Organic municipal solid waste
/ Phosphates
/ Polysaccharides
/ Production management
/ Raw materials
/ Recycling
/ Rhodococcus opacus
/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae
/ Solid waste management
/ Solid wastes
/ Species
/ Triglycerides
/ Vanillin
/ Waste disposal
/ Waste management
/ Yeast
2020
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Robust microorganisms for biofuel and chemical production from municipal solid waste
Journal Article
Robust microorganisms for biofuel and chemical production from municipal solid waste
2020
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Overview
Background
Worldwide 3.4 billion tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) will be produced annually by 2050, however, current approaches to MSW management predominantly involve unsustainable practices like landfilling and incineration. The organic fraction of MSW (OMSW) typically comprises ~ 50% lignocellulose-rich material but is underexplored as a biomanufacturing feedstock due to its highly inconsistent and heterogeneous composition. This study sought to overcome the limitations associated with studying MSW-derived feedstocks by using OMSW produced from a realistic and reproducible MSW mixture on a commercial autoclave system. The resulting OMSW fibre was enzymatically hydrolysed and used to screen diverse microorganisms of biotechnological interest to identify robust species capable of fermenting this complex feedstock.
Results
The autoclave pre-treated OMSW fibre contained a polysaccharide fraction comprising 38% cellulose and 4% hemicellulose. Enzymatic hydrolysate of OMSW fibre was high in
d
-glucose (5.5% w/v) and
d
-xylose (1.8%w/v) but deficient in nitrogen and phosphate. Although relatively low levels of levulinic acid (30 mM) and vanillin (2 mM) were detected and furfural and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural were absent, the hydrolysate contained an abundance of potentially toxic metals (0.6% w/v). Hydrolysate supplemented with 1% yeast extract to alleviate nutrient limitation was used in a substrate-oriented shake-flask screen with eight biotechnologically useful microorganisms (
Clostridium saccharoperbutylacetonicum
,
Escherichia coli
,
Geobacillus thermoglucosidasius
,
Pseudomonas putida
,
Rhodococcus opacus
,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
,
Schizosaccharomyces pombe
and
Zymomonas mobilis
). Each species’ growth and productivity were characterised and three species were identified that robustly and efficiently fermented OMSW fibre hydrolysate without significant substrate inhibition:
Z. mobilis
,
S. cerevisiae
and
R. opacus
, respectively produced product to 69%, 70% and 72% of the maximum theoretical fermentation yield and could theoretically produce 136 kg and 139 kg of ethanol and 91 kg of triacylglycerol (TAG) per tonne of OMSW.
Conclusions
Developing an integrated biorefinery around MSW has the potential to significantly alleviate the environmental burden of current waste management practices. Substrate-oriented screening of a representative and reproducible OMSW-derived fibre identified microorganisms intrinsically suited to growth on OMSW hydrolysates. These species are promising candidates for developing an MSW biorefining platform and provide a foundation for future studies aiming to valorise this underexplored feedstock.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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