Monday, March 5, 2012

Kelp fuel breakthrough

Scientists have long struggled to produce ethanol from seaweed. The stumbling block was alginate, one of four kinds of sugars produced by seaweed. Alginate — a complex polysaccharide — is difficult for microbes to breakdown. The breakthrough came when the researchers identified a biochemical pathway used by Vibrio splendidus, a marine microbe that feeds on brown seaweed, and inserted the responsible genes into a strain of E. coli. The bacterium was designed to convert the seaweed sugars directly into ethanol.

"About 60 percent of the dry biomass of seaweed are fermentable carbohydrates, and approximately half of those are locked in a single carbohydrate - alginate," said Daniel Trunfio, Chief Executive Officer at Bio Architecture Lab, in a statement. "Our scientists have engineered an enzyme to degrade and a pathway to metabolize the alginate, allowing us to utilize all the major sugars in seaweed, which therefore makes the biomass an economical feedstock for the production of renewable fuels and chemicals." The study estimates that seaweed growing in less than 3 percent of the planet's coastal waters could produce enough ethanol to replace over 60 billion gallons of fossil fuels. It notes that large-scale seaweed production is already common around the world.

Source: http://news.mongabay.com/2012/0120-kelp_power.html#ixzz1oFXFNZSP

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