Metabolic profile of wild-type and ethanol-adapted Clostridium thermocellum in continuous culture

FUEL 96

Satyakrishna Jujjuri, jujjuri@uky.edu1, Barbara L Knutson, bknutson@engr.uky.edu1, Anup Thakur, apthak2@uky.edu2, Bert Lynn, bclynn2@uky.edu2, Ester Dittert, ester@uky.edu3, Sue Nokes, snokes@bae.uky.edu3, and Herbert Strobel, strobel@uky.edu4. (1) Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University Of Kentucky, 177 Anderson Hall, Lexington, KY 40506-0046, (2) Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, ASTeCC Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0055, (3) Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, University of Kentucky, lexington, KY 40546, (4) Department of Animal Sciences, University of Kentucky, 212 W. P. Garrigus Building, Lexington, KY 40546-0215
Thermophilic anaerobic bacteria such as Clostridium thermocellum have significant advantages relative to yeast in their ability to convert fibrous organic material to vendable chemicals, fuels, and other bioproducts. The adaptation of thermophilic bacteria to ethanol addresses their relatively low ethanol tolerance, one of the technological barriers to efficient biomass conversion. This adaptation has been linked to the bacteria's general response to extreme environments (i.e., temperature, pressure, pH, and organic solvents). The metabolic pathways of wild type (WT) and ethanol adapted (EA) C. thermocellum are quantified and compared as a function of growth rate (dilution rate of 0.05 h-1) in continuous culture at atmospheric pressure, T = 55°C, and at a cellobiose concentration of 4 g/l with varying concentrations of exogenous ethanol from 0 to 5 % w/v. Metabolite analysis is conducted using capillary electrophoresis (CE)/mass spectrometry. This work represents the first chemostat culture of ethanol-adapted C. thermocellum. Such continuous culture provides steady state metabolic data at controlled growth rates and are useful for modeling. The differences in the metabolic profiles of WT and EA cells in response to growth rate and exogenous ethanol suggests genetic, adaptive, and environmental approaches to maximize the commercial viability of C. thermocellum for biomass conversion.
 

Biofuels: Lignocellulosic Biofuels
1:15 PM-5:10 PM, Monday, August 20, 2007 Boston Park Plaza -- Arlington Rm, Oral

Division of Fuel Chemistry

The 234th ACS National Meeting, Boston, MA, August 19-23, 2007