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Review article - Peer-reviewed, 2022

Prospective CO2 and CO bioconversion into ectoines using novel microbial platforms

Cantera, Sara; Tamarit, Daniel; Strong, Peter James; Sanchez-Andrea, Irene; Ettema, Thijs J. G.; Sousa, Diana Z.

Abstract

Microbial conversion of CO2 and CO into chemicals is a promising route that can contribute to the cost-effective reduction of anthropogenic green house and waste gas emissions and create a more circular economy. However, the biotechnological valorization of CO2 and CO into chemicals is still restricted by the limited number of model microorganisms implemented, and the small profit margin of the products synthesized. This perspective paper intends to explore the genetic potential for the microbial conversion of CO2 and CO into ectoines, in a tentative to broaden bioconversion platforms and the portfolio of products from C-1 gas fermentations. Ectoine and hydroxyectoine can be produced by microorganisms growing at high salinity. They are high-value commodities for the pharmaceutical and medical sectors (1000-1200 euro/kg). Currently microbial ectoine production is based on sugar fermentations, but expansion to other more sustainable and cheaper substrates is desirable. In this work, a literature review to identify halophilic microbes able to use CO2 and CO as a carbon source was performed. Subsequently, genomes of this poll of microbes were mined for genes that encode for ectoine and hydroxyectoine synthesis (ectABCD, ask, asd and ask_ect). As a result, we identified a total of 31 species with the genetic potential to synthesize ectoine and 14 to synthesize hydroxyectoine. These microbes represent the basis for the creation of novel microbial-platforms that can promote the development of cost-effective and sustainable valorization chains of CO2 and CO in different industrial scenarios.

Keywords

Valuable compounds; Greenhouse gases; Bioconversion; Gas fermentation; Circular economy

Published in

Reviews in Environmental Science and Biotechnology
2022, Volume: 21, number: 3, pages: 571-581
Publisher: SPRINGER

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Other Environmental Biotechnology

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11157-022-09627-y

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/118614