The present invention generally relates to biofuels-production technology. More specifically, the present invention provides a photobiological ethanol production and harvesting methodology with greenhouse distillation systems and designer transgenic oxyphotobacteria that are created to use the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) acquired from the photosynthetic process for synthesis of ethanol (CH3CH2OH) directly from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O).
Ethanol (CH3CH2OH) can be used as a liquid fuel to run engines such as cars. A significant market for ethanol as a liquid fuel already exists in the current transportation and energy systems. In the United States, currently, ethanol is generated primarily from corn starch using a yeast-fermentation process. Therefore, the “cornstarch ethanol production” process requires a number of energy-consuming steps including agricultural corn-crop cultivation, corn-grain harvesting, corn-grain starch processing, and starch-to-sugar-to-ethanol fermentation. Independent studies have recently shown that the net energy gain of the “cornstarch ethanol production” process is very limited. That is, the “cornstarch ethanol production” process costs nearly as much energy as the energy value of its product ethanol. This is not surprising, understandably because the cornstarch that the current technology can use represents only a small fraction of the corn crop biomass that includes the corn stalks, leaves and roots. The cornstovers are commonly discarded in the agricultural fields where they slowly decompose back to CO2, because they represent largely lignocellulosic biomass materials that the current efforts in trying to make ethanol from lignocellulosic plant biomass materials—a concept called “cellulosic ethanol”. However, plant biomass has evolved effective mechanisms for resisting assault on its cell-wall structural sugars from the microbial and animal kingdoms. This property underlies a natural recalcitrance, creating roadblocks to the cost-effective transformation of lignocellulosic biomass to fermentable sugars. Therefore, one of its problems known as the “lignocellulosic recalcitrance” represents a formidable technical barrier to the cost-effective conversion of plant biomass to fermentable sugars. That is, because of the recalcitrance problem, lignocellulosic biomasses (such as cornstover, switchgrass, and woody plant materials) could not be readily converted to fermentable sugars to make ethanol without certain pretreatment, which is often associated with high processing cost. Despite more than 50 years of R&D efforts in lignocellulosic biomass pretreatment and fermentative ethanol-production processing, the problem of recalcitrant lignocellulosics still remains as a formidable technical barrier that has not yet been eliminated so far. Furthermore, the steps of lignocellulosic biomass cultivation, harvesting, pretreatment processing, and cellulose-to-sugar-to-ethanol fermentation all cost energy. Therefore, any new technology that could bypass these bottleneck problems of the biomass technology would be useful.
Oxyphotobacteria are prokaryotic organisms that are capable of performing oxygenic autotrophic photosynthesis using water as the source of electrons and carbon dioxide as the source of carbon. In nature, there are two orders of oxygenic photosynthetic prokaryotes within the class of the Oxyphotobacteria: Cyanobacteria (such as, Synechococcus elongatus, Anabaena sp., Synechocystis sp., Nostoc punctiforme, Spirulina platensis, and Thermosynechococcus elongatus) and Oxychlorobacteria (such as Prochlorococcus marinus, Prochloron didemni, and Prochlorothrix hollandica). Cyanobacteria are commonly also known as “blue-green algae”; and Oxychlorobacteria are sometimes regarded as “the ‘other’ Cyanobacteria” or more scientifically classified as Prochlorophytes since they contain both chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) and chlorophyll-b (Chl-b). For example, Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 (oxychlorobacterium) possesses an unorthodox pigment composition of divinyl derivatives of Chl-a and Chl-b, a-carotene, zeaxanthin, and a type of phycoerythrin. By contrast, the highly related Synechococcus (cyanobacterium) contains Chl-a and phycobilins that are more typical of cyanobacteria. assimilation of CO2 with O2 evolution from water in a liquid culture medium with a maximal theoretical solar-to-biomass energy conversion of about 10%; these oxygenic photosynthetic prokaryotes have tremendous potential to be a clean and renewable energy resource. However, the wild-type oxygenic photosynthetic organisms, such as the wild-type cyanobacteria, do not possess the ability to produce ethanol directly from CO2 and H2O. The wild-type photosynthesis uses the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) from the photosynthetic water splitting and proton gradient-coupled electron transport process through the thylakoid membrane system to reduce CO2 into carbohydrates (CH2O)n with a series of enzymes collectively called the “Calvin cycle” at the cytoplasm stroma region in Cyanobacteria. The net result of the wild-type photosynthetic process is the conversion of CO2 and H2O into carbohydrates (CH2O)n and O2 using sunlight energy according to the following process reaction:
nCO2+nH2O→(CH2O)n+nO2 [1]
The carbohydrates (CH2O)n are then further converted to all kinds of complicated cellular (biomass) materials including proteins, lipids, glycogen, and cellulose and other cell-structural materials during cell metabolism and growth.
Based on the current scientific knowledge, wild-type oxyphotobacteria including cyanobacteria (such as Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942, Nostoc sp. PCC 7120, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1) and oxychlorobacteria (such as Prochlorococcus marinus MIT 9313, Prochlorococcus marinus SS120, and Prochlorococcus marinus MED4) are not capable of photosynthetic ethanol production directly from CO2 and H2O. The fundamental properties of oxygenic photosynthesis in oxyphotobacteria are quite similar to those in eukaryotic algae and higher plants. However, there are also some significant differences between the prokaryotes (oxyphotobacteria) and the eukaryotes (algae and higher plants). The Calvin-cycle activity (the photosynthetic CO2-fixation process) in eukaryotic algae (and higher plants) occurs inside a chloroplast, which is a well-organized photosynthetic organelle. On the other hand, the Calvin-cycle activity in oxyphotobacteria occurs in the cytoplasm since the prokaryotic organisms do not have a chloroplast organelle. In addition, oxyphotobacteria as prokaryotes do not have a nucleus organelle; and their molecular genetic organization and machineries are also somewhat different from those prokaryotic designer oxyphotobacteria for photosynthetic ethanol production directly from CO2 and H2O.
The present invention provides a photobiological ethanol production and harvesting methodology with greenhouse distillation systems and designer transgenic oxyphotobacteria that are capable of synthesizing ethanol directly from CO2 and H2O. The integrated photobiological ethanol production and harvesting technology provided by the present invention could bypass all the bottleneck problems of the biomass industry mentioned above.
The present invention provides photobiological ethanol production and harvesting methods based on designer transgenic oxyphotobacteria and greenhouse distillations. The designer oxyphotobacteria are created through genetic engineering such that the endogenous photosynthesis regulation mechanism is tamed, and the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) acquired from the photosynthetic water splitting and proton gradient-coupled electron transport process are used for immediate synthesis of ethanol (CH3CH2OH) directly from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O). The designer use of a special pair of NADPH-dependent vs. NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases in the oxyphotobacterial pathway designs offers a cyclic “transhydrogenase” redox-shuttle function to convert NADPH to NADH for enhanced photobiological ethanol production. The photosynthetic ethanol-production technology of the present invention is expected to have a much higher solar-to-ethanol energy-conversion efficiency than the current technology.
A fundamental feature of the present photosynthetic ethanol production methodology is to create designer oxyphotobacteria that contain transgenes coding for a set of enzymes that can act on an intermediate product of the Calvin cycle and convert the intermediate product immediately into ethanol, instead of making glycogen and other complex biomass materials. Accordingly, the present invention provides, inter alia, methods for producing ethanol based on a designer oxyphotobacterium, DNA constructs encoding genes of a designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway, as well as the designer oxyphotobacteria created.
production of ethanol by growing a designer oxyphotobacterium (such as a designer cyanobacterium) in a liquid culture medium, wherein the oxyphotobacterial cells are genetically engineered to express a set of enzymes in the cytoplasm that act on an intermediate product of the Calvin cycle and convert the intermediate product into ethanol.
According to the present invention, a designer oxyphotobacterium for use in the photobiological ethanol production can be created utilizing essentially any oxyphotobacteria as host organisms that have a photosynthetic capability and can be cultured in a liquid medium. Preferred species of oxyphotobacteria for use in the present invention include (but not limited to): Thermosynechococcus elongatus, Nostoc sp. PCC 7120, Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301, Syncechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942, Syncechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002, Syncechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, Spirulina platensis (Arthrospira platensis), Spirulina pacifica, Lyngbya majuscule, Anabaena sp., Synechocystis sp., Synechococcus elongatus, Nostoc punctiforme, Syncechococcus sp. strain PCC 7943, Synechocyitis PCC 6714 phycocyanin-deficient mutant PD-1, Cyanothece strain 51142, Oscillatoria limosa, Gloeobacter violaceus, Prochlorococcus marinus, Prochlorococcus marinus MIT 9313, and Prochlorococcus marinus MED4.
Higher ethanol tolerance can be translated to a more robust and efficient ethanol-production technology. In one of the various embodiments, various photosynthetic organisms are screened for higher ethanol tolerance by characterizing their rates of photosynthesis under anaerobic conditions in the presence of ethanol using a specially designed dual- and/or multi-reactor-flow detection system that can be used for simultaneous measurement of CO2 fixation, ethanol production, pH, O2 and H2 evolution, cells density, and actinic intensity. The screening process comprises the following steps: a) Measuring the rates of photosynthesis in the organisms in the presence of ethanol at a concentration range from 0% to about 20% and/or under certain environmental conditions of special interest including (but not limited to) heat, cold, and salinity stresses; b) Plotting measured photosynthesis rates as a function of ethanol concentration for each strain of photosynthetic organisms; and c) Identifying ethanol-tolerant photosynthetic organisms by comparing their photosynthesis rate vs. ethanol concentration curves.
oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway in a host depends on from which intermediate product of the Calvin cycle the designer pathway branches off from the Calvin cycle. In one embodiment, the designer pathway branches off from the point of glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate and converts it into ethanol by using, for example, the set of enzymes consisting of NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase, pyruvate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, and alcohol dehydrogenase. In this designer pathway, for conversion of one molecule of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to ethanol, an NADH molecule is generated from NAD+ at the step from glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to 1,3-diphosphoglycerate catalyzed by NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase while an NADH molecule is converted to NAD+ at the terminal step from acetaldehyde to ethanol catalyzed by alcohol dehydrogenase. That is, the number of NADH molecules consumed is balanced with the number of NADH molecules generated. Therefore, this designer ethanol-production pathway can operate continuously.
In another embodiment, the designer oxyphotobacterial pathway branches off from the point of 3-phosphoglycerate of the Calvin cycle, and is composed of a set of enzymes including, for example, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase, pyruvate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, and alcohol dehydrogenase. In order for this ethanol-production pathway to operate, the alcohol dehydrogenase has to be able to use NADPH that can be generated by the photo-driven electron-transport process. Therefore, it is a preferred practice to use an alcohol dehydrogenase that can use NADPH or both NADPH and NADH (i.e., NAD(P)H) for this particular designer ethanol-production pathway. Alternatively, when an alcohol dehydrogenase that can only use NADH is employed, it is preferably here to use an additional embodiment for an NADPH/NADH conversion mechanism in the designer organism's cytoplasm to facilitate photosynthetic production of ethanol through this designer pathway.
In still another embodiment, the designer oxyphotobacterial pathway branches off from the point of fructose-1,6-diphosphate and converts it into ethanol by a set of enzymes including, for example, fructose-diphosphate aldolase, triose-phosphate isomerase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase, pyruvate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, and alcohol
In yet another embodiment, the designer oxyphotobacterial pathway branches off from the point of fructose-6-phosphate and is composed of a set of enzymes including, for example, phosphofructose kinase, fructose-diphosphate aldolase, triose-phosphate isomerase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase, pyruvate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, and alcohol dehydrogenase. It can be noted that certain sets of designer enzymes may permit two or more designer pathways, i.e., pathways that branches off from two or more points of the Calvin cycle for the production of ethanol.
Further in accordance with a number of the various embodiments, the expression of the designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-producing pathway is controlled through the use of an externally inducible promoter so that the designer transgenes are inducibly expressed under certain specific conditions. In one embodiment, the inducible promoter used to control the expression of designer oxyphotobacterial genes is a promoter that is inducible by anaerobiosis, including, for example, the promoters of the bidirectional hydrogenase hox operon. Additional inducible promoters suitable for use in the present invention include the nitrite reductase (nirA) promoters, the heat- and light-responsive groE promoters, the zinc-inducible smt promoter, the iron-responsive idiA promoter, the redox-responsive crhR promoter, the CO2-responsive promoters of carbonic-anhydrase genes, the small-heat-shock protein promoters including the hsp16.6 promoter and hspA promoter, the red/green-light-responsive cpcB2A2 promoter, the UV-light responsive lexA, recA and ruvB promoters, and the Rubisco-operon promoters including the rbcL promoter.
In another aspect of the present invention, designer oxyphotobacterial DNA constructs are provided, which contain one or more nucleotide sequences encoding one or more designer ethanol-production-pathway enzymes, each of which is placed in an operable linkage to an inducible promoter. The constructs may contain additional appropriate sequences, such as a selection marker gene to facilitate the screening and identification of transformants. Nucleic acid constructs carrying designer genes can be delivered into a host oxyphotobacteria using the available gene-transformation techniques, such as electroporation, ballistic delivery of DNA, PEG induced uptake, and conjugation and natural transformation.
oxychlorobacteria that have been created to contain one or more designer construct, form another embodiment of the present invention. In a further aspect, the present invention provides additional methods for enhanced photosynthetic ethanol production, the related designer constructs and designer oxyphotobacteria.
In a specific embodiment, a photosynthetic ethanol-producing designer oxyphotobacteria, as described above, has been further modified to contain additional designer transgenes to inducibly express one or more enzymes to facilitate the NADPH/NADH conversion, such as the NADPH phosphatase and NAD kinase, and more importantly the designer use of a pair of NADPH-dependent and NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases in the pathway designs conferring a cyclic “transhydrogenase” function to covert NADPH to NADH for enhanced photobiological ethanol production. Alternatively, the alcohol dehydrogenase can be selected and modified so that it can directly use NADPH as well.
In another embodiment, a photosynthetic ethanol-producing designer oxyphotobacterium has been further modified to inactivate glycogen-synthesis activity. In a specific embodiment, such further modification includes introduction of a designer DNA construct that encodes and inducibly expresses an interfering RNA (iRNA) molecule that specifically inhibits the synthesis of a glycogen-synthesis-pathway enzyme, for example, glycogen synthase, glucose-1-phosphate adenylyltransferase, and/or phosphoglucomutase for enhanced photobiological production of ethanol.
In still another embodiment, a photosynthetic ethanol-producing oxyphotobacterium has been further modified to contain an additional set of designer genes that facilitate glycogen (starch) degradation and glycolysis in the cytoplasm. Such additional designer genes include, for example, genes coding for amylase, 4-alpha-glucanotransferase, glycogen phosphorylase, glucokinase, phosphoglucomutase, and glucose-6-phosphate isomerase.
The present invention also provides a process of using a designer oxyphotobacterium, in combination with a photobiological reactor system and an ethanol separation/harvesting process for photosynthetic production of ethanol and O2 directly from CO2 and H2O using sunlight. Both industrial CO2 sources and/or atmospheric CO2 from the environment may be used in the designer-oxyphotobacteria photobiological
The present invention further provides a combined photobiological ethanol production and harvesting technology using a special solar-greenhouse-distillation system with designer photosynthetic organisms, such as transgenic oxyphotobacteria, designer transgenic algae, or transgenic plant cells that can use the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) acquired from the photosynthetic process for immediate synthesis of ethanol (CH3CH2OH) directly from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O). The integrated solar-greenhouse-distillation system comprises typically a series of distillation greenhouses working together in series and/or in parallel for photobiological culture growth, ethanol production and harvesting with efficient utilization of sunlight energy. In various embodiments, sunlight is used to drive photobiological ethanol production and, at the same time, generate heat in the culture medium. The solar heat associated with the photobiological process is utilized in vaporizing the product ethanol (and water) for harvesting by fractional greenhouse distillation. Consequently, a fundamental feature of the present photobiological ethanol production and harvesting methodology is to use solar energy to drive both photosynthesis and ethanol harvesting through greenhouse distillation with high sunlight utilization efficiency and minimal cost.
In one of the various embodiments, a distillation greenhouse comprises a photobiological ethanol-production culture reactor in a sealed greenhouse with a tilted vapor-condensing transparent ceiling, condensate-collecting ducts around the greenhouse walls below the ceiling level, and a tail-gas condensing and venting unit. As the use of sunlight driving photosynthesis and generating heat in the photobiological ethanol-production liquid culture medium, the associated solar heat vaporizes the product ethanol (with water) from the reactor medium. The ethanol-richer vapor condenses onto the vapor-condensing transparent tilted ceiling that is cooled by air, winds, and thermo infra-red radiation to the outer space. The vapor-condensing transparent ceiling can also be cooled flexibly by running cold water through a water-chamber system over the ceiling. Depending on the surface property of the ceiling material, the tilted-ceiling angle α should be at least above 5 degrees, preferably 15-30 degrees, and more preferably 30-70 degrees at all inner surface areas of the ceiling to prevent condensate droplets from free falling from the ceiling surface back into the culture medium below. In this way, as the vapor condenses, the condensate droplets can slide downwards along the inner surface of use of the surface tension (interaction) and the Earth gravity pulling force. The collected condensate which is richer in ethanol content is then transported through a condensate-transferring tube by use of gravity to a storage tank or into the next distillation greenhouse for re-distillation until achieving the desired ethanol concentration in the final distillate(s).
According to one of the various embodiments, a tail-gas condensing and venting unit comprises a cold-water-bath chamber, a tail-gas condensing tube coil, a gas-condensate chamber, and a vertical venting tube. During the operation, the tail-gas condensing tube coil, gas-condensate chamber, and vertical venting tube are all cooled by running cold water through the cold-water-bath chamber so that the vapor in the tail gas will condense along the condensing tube coil which is connected with gas-condensate chamber before venting through the vertical venting tube.
In another embodiment, the condensate (containing ethanol and water) from a tail-gas condensing and venting system is collected for harvesting. Therefore, product ethanol and fresh water can also be harvested from the tail gas through use of a tail-gas condensing and venting unit or a number of tail-gas condensing and venting units in series and/or in parallel.
In another embodiment, a distillation greenhouse comprises a photobiological reactor with a series of tubes, adjustable inlets, adjustable outlets, and/or baffles to guide the flow of the liquid culture medium for enhanced photobiological ethanol production and harvesting.
In another embodiment, a distillation greenhouse comprises a photobiological reactor with a water-chamber transparent tilted ceiling that can be cooled by running cold water through the chamber over the ceiling to enhance the distillation process. The use of a water-cooled ceiling system can also moderate the greenhouse temperature so that not only thermophilic but also mesophilic designer organisms can be used with the greenhouse distillation system for photobiological ethanol production and harvesting.
In yet another embodiment, a distillation greenhouse comprises a lower bioreactor chamber for photobiological culture growth and an upper chamber for beer distillation. The upper distillation chamber and lower bioreactor chamber are separated by a transparent impermeable plate and/or film (or membrane) that allows only sunlight cell culture at the lower bioreactor chamber. The solar waste heat is used for evaporation of the ethanol-containing liquid at the upper distillation chamber above the photobiological culture reactor. The vapor is then condensed onto the inner surface of the ceiling as mentioned previously. The distillation chamber is preferably compartmentalized so that the vapor in one compartment is separated from those of other compartments while only the beer liquid can gradually flow from one compartment to the next in series through the guiding baffles, adjustable inlets and outlets, tubes, and/or a channel or hole at the lower part (immersed in the beer liquid) of an inter compartment wall. As the beer passes through the compartments in series, its ethanol content is removed by distillation. Depending on the need and processing conditions, any number of distillation compartments (such as 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and etc) can be used in series. Therefore, as a beer liquid passes through the distillation compartments in series, the ethanol content in the beer liquid can be reduced to a minimal level so that the residual liquid exiting from the last re-distillation compartment is essentially freshwater that may be recycled for making culture media and/or for other use as a byproduct.
In still another embodiment, a photobiological ethanol-production and solar-heat-driven greenhouse distillation system comprises a bioreactor (for photobiological culture with headspace), distillation chambers above the bioreactor, and an oxygen-gas harvesting system. The headspace in the bioreactor allows convenient gas exchange for CO2 feeding and flexible O2 harvesting. Both industrial CO2 and/or atmospheric CO2 from the environment can be fed through a pipeline into the bioreactor for use in the oxygenic photobiological ethanol-production process. The oxygen-gas harvesting system comprises an O2-separation membrane system, an oxygen-gas pump, and an O2 storage tank. Use of this oxygen-gas harvesting system connected through a pipeline can flexibly harvest the photosynthetically produced O2 from the headspace of the bioreactor.
According to one of the various embodiments, any number of distillation greenhouses (such as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and etc) can be used in series and/or in parallel. As the number of re-distillations increase, the resulting ethanol concentration in the condensates (distillates) increases. The maximum achievable ethanol concentration through this type of fractional greenhouse distillation is 96% ethanol, which is sufficiently high in quality that can be used directly as a fuel to run designed to efficiently and maximally utilize solar (both its visible and infra-red radiation) energy for both photobiological production of ethanol from CO2 and H2O and harvesting of the product ethanol through a series of greenhouse distillations with minimal cost. In addition to the photobiological production and harvesting of ethanol, use of the technology can also produce freshwater, oxygen gas, and used biomass culture as byproducts. The photobiological ethanol production and harvesting technology of the present invention is expected to have a much higher solar-to-ethanol energy-conversion efficiency than the current technology and could also help protect the Earth's environment from the dangerous accumulation of CO2 in the atmosphere.
ethanol-production-pathway genes for photobiological production of ethanol (CH3CH2OH) from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O).
The present invention is directed to a photobiological ethanol production and distillations. The designer oxyphotobacteria are created using genetic engineering techniques such that the endogenous photosynthesis regulation mechanism is tamed, and the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) acquired from the photosynthetic water splitting and proton gradient-coupled electron transport process can be used for immediate synthesis of ethanol (CH3CH2OH) directly from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) according to the following process reaction:
2CO2+3H2O→CH3CH2OH+3O2 [2]
The oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production methods of the present invention completely eliminate the problem of recalcitrant lignocellulosics by bypassing the bottleneck problem of the biomass technology. As shown in
Another fundamental feature of the present methodology is utilizing a oxyphotobacterium (such as a cyanobacterium) as a host organism, introducing into the oxyphotobacterium nucleic acid molecules coding for a set of enzymes that can act on an intermediate product of the Calvin cycle and convert the intermediate product into ethanol as illustrated in
According to the present invention, a designer oxyphotobacterium for the photobiological ethanol production of the invention can be created utilizing as host, any oxyphotobacteria including Cyanobacteria (Cyanophyta) and Oxychlorobacteria (Prochlorophytes) that have an oxygenic photosynthetic capability, i.e., an active photosynthetic apparatus and enzymatic pathway that captures light energy through photosynthesis, using this energy to convert inorganic substances (water and CO2) into organic matter.
Suitable genera of Cyanophyta include (but not limited to) Phoridium, Synechocystis, Syncechococcus, Oscillatoria, and Anabaena. Suitable genera of Prochlorophytes include (but not limited to) Prochloron, Prochlorothrix, and Prochlorococcus. Preferred species of oxyphotobacteria for use in the present invention include (but not limited to): Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1, Nostoc sp. PCC 7120, Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301, Syncechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942, Syncechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002, Syncechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, Prochlorococcus marinus MED4, Prochlorococcus marinus MIT 9313, (Arthrospira platensis), Spirulina Pacifica, Lyngbya Majuscule, Anabaena sp., Synechocystis sp., Synechococcus elongates, Synechococcus (MC-A), Trichodesmium sp., Richelia intracellularis, Synechococcus WH7803, Synechococcus WH8102, Nostoc punctiforme, Syncechococcus sp. strain PCC 7943, Synechocyitis PCC 6714 phycocyanin-deficient mutant PD-1, Cyanothece strain 51142, Cyanothece sp. CCY0110, Oscillatoria limosa, Lyngbya majuscula, Symploca muscorum, Gloeobacter violaceus, Prochloron didemni, Prochlorothrix hollandica, Synechococcus (MC-A), Trichodesmium sp., Richelia intracellularis, Prochlorococcus marinus, Prochlorococcus SS120, Synechococcus WH8102, Lyngbya majuscula, Symploca muscorum, Synechococcus bigranulatus, cryophilic Oscillatoria sp., Phormidium sp., Nostoc sp.-1, Calothrix parietina, thermophilic Synechococcus bigranulatus, Synechococcus lividus, thermophilic Mastigocladus laminosus, Chlorogloeopsis fritschii PCC 6912, Synechococcus vulcanus, Synechococcus sp. strain MA4, Synechococcus sp. strain MA19, and Thermosynechococcus elongatus.
Oxyphotobacteria can be cultured in a liquid medium. Ethanol produced from an aquatic oxyphotobacterium can diffuse into water, permitting normal cell growth and more robust production of ethanol from the designer organism. Liquid cultures of oxyphotobacterial cells are highly preferred for use, since the ethanol molecules produced from a designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway can readily diffuse out of the cells into the liquid water medium, which can serve as a large pool to store the product ethanol that can be subsequently harvested by filtration and/or distillation techniques.
By “liquid medium” is meant liquid water plus relatively small amounts of inorganic nutrients (e.g., N, P, K etc, commonly in their salt forms) for photoautotrophic cultures; and sometimes also including certain organic substrates (e.g., sucrose, glucose, or acetate) for photomixotrophic and/or photoheterotrophic cultures. The use of oxyphotobacteria has several advantages. They can be grown in an open pond at large amounts and low costs. Harvest and purification of ethanol from the water phase is also easily accomplished by distillation or membrane separation.
Ethanol-tolerant photosynthetic organisms are highly desirable in photobiological ethanol production, because a higher ethanol tolerance can be translated to a more robust embodiments, various photosynthetic organisms are screened for higher ethanol tolerance by characterizing their rates of photosynthesis in the presence of ethanol and under various environmental conditions (such as heat, cold, and salinity stresses) using a specially designed dual- and/or multi-reactor-flow detection system that can be used for simultaneous measurement of CO2 fixation, ethanol production, pH, O2 and H2 evolution, cells density, and actinic intensity. The screening process comprises the following steps: a) Measuring the rates of photosynthesis in the organisms in the presence of ethanol at a concentration range from 0% to about 20% and/or under certain environmental conditions of special interest including (but not limited to) heat, cold, and salinity stresses; b) Plotting measured photosynthesis rates as a function of ethanol concentration for each strain of photosynthetic organisms; and c) Identifying ethanol-tolerant photosynthetic organisms by comparing their photosynthesis rate vs. ethanol concentration curves.
In accordance with one of the various embodiments, any of the components a) through c) of this screening process are adjusted to suit for certain specific conditions. In practice, any of the components a) through c) of this screening process are applied in full or in part, and/or in any adjusted combination to achieve more desirable results. For example, in one of the various embodiments, the step a) of measuring the rates of photosynthesis in the organisms is performed preferably under anaerobic conditions to avoid pseudo tolerance to ethanol because of oxidative consumption of ethanol through respiratory pathway(s). Under anaerobic conditions, oxidative consumption of ethanol by the organism under screening is minimized. This will help avoid the selection of “pseudo ethanol-tolerance” phenotype that is due to the respiratory consumption (removal) of ethanol from the culture medium; it will enhance the selection of true ethanol tolerance that is useful to photobiological ethanol-production technology development.
According to one of various embodiments, an ethanol tolerant and environmental stress (such as heat, cold, salinity) tolerant photosynthetic organism for can be selected from many photosynthetic organisms including Cyanobacteria (Cyanophyta) and Oxychlorobacteria (Prochlorophytes) that have an oxygenic photosynthetic capability, i.e., an active photosynthetic apparatus and enzymatic pathway that captures light energy through photosynthesis, using this energy to convert inorganic substances (water and adequate photosynthetic CO2 fixation rate, for example, to support photosynthetic ethanol production from CO2 and H2O at least about 1,780 kg ethanol per acre per year, more preferably, 8,870 kg ethanol per acre per year, or even more preferably, 88,700 kg ethanol per acre per year.
Many photosynthetic organisms such as oxyphotobacteria can be cultured in a liquid medium, which typically is liquid water plus relatively small amounts of inorganic nutrients (e.g., N, P, K etc, commonly in their salt forms) for photoautotrophic cultures. According to one of the various embodiments, their ethanol tolerance and other stress (including but not limited to heat, cold, and salinity) tolerance can be measured by measuring their rates of photosynthesis such as CO2 fixation and/or O2 evolution in the presence of ethanol at certain concentrations in the liquid culture medium and/or at various temperature and salinity conditions. Use of a dual- and/or multi-reactor-flow detection system can facilitate the measurements that include simultaneous measurement of CO2 fixation, ethanol production, pH, O2 and H2 evolution, cells density, and actinic intensity. The advantage of a dual-(or multi)-reactor-flow detection system is that it allows assay of two or multiple different samples simultaneously and at virtually identical conditions. Any systematic error of the dual-reactor system can be eliminated by interchanging two samples between the two reactors for each replication of assays. Therefore, use of this type of dual-reactor-flow systems can provide reliable measurements for screening of ethanol tolerance and/or other environmental stress tolerance. Typically, the O2 concentration in the reactor medium or in the carrier gas stream is below 100 ppmv so that no significant respiratory consumption of ethanol by the organism could occur. Therefore, the photosynthesis rates measured under anaerobic conditions in the presence of ethanol will reflect the true ethanol tolerance of a given organism that is relevant to the potential capability for robust photobiological ethanol production. The tolerance of other environmental stresses (such as heat, cold, and salinity stresses) can be similarly measured and screened.
According to another embodiment, an ethanol-tolerant photosynthetic organism can be developed through a mutagenesis and screening process that comprises the following steps: a) Mutagenizing photosynthetic organisms; b) Selecting mutagenized photosynthetic organisms in the presence of a critical ethanol concentration; c) Growing a selected colony into a liquid culture; e) Further screening for ethanol-tolerant photosynthetic organisms by measuring photosynthesis rate in the presence of ethanol at a concentration range from 1% to about 20% and/or under certain environmental conditions including (but not limited to) heat, cold, and salinity stresses; and f) repeating steps a) through e) for a plurality of operational cycles to achieve more desirable results.
In practice, any of the steps a) through f) of this ethanol-tolerance developing process are applied in full or in part, and/or in any adjusted combination to achieve more desirable results. In one of the various embodiments, for example, the step of mutagenizing photosynthetic organisms is carried out by a series of mutagenesis techniques such as radiation induced mutagenesis, insertional mutagenesis, and chemical-induced mutagenesis that are known to those skilled in the art. The step b) of selecting mutagenized photosynthetic organisms in the presence of a critical ethanol concentration is performed preferably under anaerobic conditions to avoid pseudo tolerance to ethanol because of oxidative consumption of ethanol through respiratory pathway(s).
Screening for ethanol-tolerant photosynthetic organisms in combination with proper selection for their genetic backgrounds and certain special features is also beneficial. For example, a photosynthetic-ethanol-producing designer oxyphotobacterium created from cryophilic oxyphotobacteria (psychrophiles) such as the cryophilic Oscillatoria sp., Phormidium sp., Nostoc sp.-1, and Calothrix parietina that can grow in snow and ice, permits ethanol production even in cold seasons or regions such as Canada. Meanwhile, a designer oxyphotobacterium created from thermophilic oxyphotobacteria such as the thermophilic Synechococcus bigranulatus, and Synechococcus lividus (which can grow in hot springs, intense sunlight, high temperature), thermophilic Mastigocladus laminosus, Chlorogloeopsis fritschii PCC 6912, Synechococcus vulcanus, Synechococcus sp. strain MA4, Synechococcus sp. strain MA19, and Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1, may permit the practice of this invention to be well extended into the hot seasons or areas such as Mexico and the Southwestern region of the United States including Nevada, California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas, where the weather can often be hot. Furthermore, a photosynthetic-ethanol-producing designer oxyphotobacterium created from a marine oxyphotobacterium, such as the phycoerythrin-containing marine Synechococcus sp. Trichodesmium sp., the heterocyst-containing Richelia intracellularis, Prochlorococcus marinus, Prochlorococcus SS120, Synechococcus WH8102, Lyngbya majuscula, and Symploca muscorum, permits the practice of this invention using seawater, while the designer oxyphotobacterium created from a freshwater oxyphotobacterium such as the freshwater Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 6301, the freshwater Synechococcus elongatus, Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, Nodularia spumigena, Anabaena flosaquae and Microcystis aeruginosa, can use freshwater. Additional optional features of a photosynthetic ethanol-producing designer oxyphotobacterium include the benefits of reduced chlorophyll-antenna size, which has been demonstrated to provide higher photosynthetic productivity (Lee, Mets, and Greenbaum (2002). “Improvement of photosynthetic efficiency at high light intensity through reduction of chlorophyll antenna size,” Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology, 98-100: 37-48) and ethanol-tolerance that allows for more robust and efficient photobiological production of ethanol from CO2 and H2O. By use of a phycocyanin-deficient mutant of Synechocystis PCC 6714, it has been experimentally demonstrated that photoinhibition can be reduced also by reducing the content of light-harvesting pigments (Nakajima, Tsuzuki, and Ueda (1999). “Reduced photoinhibition of a phycocyanin-deficient mutant of Synechocystis PCC 6714”, Journal of Applied Phycology 10: 447-452). These optional features can be incorporated into a designer oxyphotobacterium, for example, by use of an ethanol-tolerant and/or light-harvesting-pigment-antenna-deficient mutant (e.g., Synechocystis PCC 6714 phycocyanin-deficient mutant PD-1) as a host organism, for gene transformation with the designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production-pathway genes. Therefore, in one of the various embodiments, a host oxyphotobacterium is selected from the group consisting of marine oxyphotobacteria, freshwater oxyphotobacteria, unicellular oxyphotobacteria, multicellular oxyphotoobacteria, cold-tolerant oxyphotobacterial strains, heat-tolerant oxyphotobacterial strains, ethanol-tolerant oxyphotobacterial strains, light-harvesting-pigment-antenna-deficient mutants, and combinations thereof.
Selecting Appropriate Designer Enzymes oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway to tame and work with the natural photosynthetic mechanisms to achieve the desirable synthesis of ethanol directly from CO2 and H2O. The natural photosynthetic mechanisms include (1) the process of photosynthetic water splitting and proton gradient-coupled electron transport through the oxyphotobacterial thylakoid membrane, which produces the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP), and (2) the Calvin cycle, which reduces CO2 by consumption of the reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) in the cytoplasm.
In accordance with the present invention, a series of enzymes are used to create a designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway that takes an intermediate product of the Calvin cycle and converts the intermediate product into ethanol. A “designer ethanol-production-pathway enzyme” is hereby defined as an enzyme that serves as a catalyst for at least one of the steps in a designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway. According to the present invention, a number of intermediate products of the Calvin cycle can be utilized to create designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway(s); and the enzymes required for a designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway are selected depending upon from which intermediate product of the Calvin cycle the designer ethanol-production pathway branches off from the Calvin cycle.
In one example, a designer oxyphotobacterial pathway is created that takes glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate and converts it into ethanol by using, for example as shown with numerical labels 01-07 in
In another example, a designer oxyphotobacterial pathway (03-07 as labeled in
In still another example, a designer oxyphotobacterial pathway (15-23) is created that takes fructose-1,6-diphosphate and converts it into ethanol by using, for example, a set of enzymes consisting of aldolase 15, triose phosphate isomerase 16, kinase 18, phosphoglycerate mutase 19, enolase 20, pyruvate kinase 21, pyruvate decarboxylase 22, and alcohol dehydrogenase 23, as shown in
Table 1 lists examples of the enzymes including those identified above for construction of the designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathways. Throughout this specification, when reference is made to an enzyme, such as, for example, any of the enzymes listed in Table 1, it includes their isozymes, functional analogs, and designer modified enzymes and combinations thereof. These enzymes can be selected for use in construction of the designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathways. The “isozymes or functional analogs” refer to certain enzymes that have the same catalytic function but may or may not have exactly the same protein structures. For example, in Saccharomyces bayanus, there are four different genes (accession numbers: AY216992, AY216993, AY216994, and AY216995) encoding four alcohol dehydrogenases. These alcohol dehydrogenases essentially have the same function as an alcohol dehydrogenase, although there are some variations in their protein sequences. Therefore, the isozymes or functional analogs can also be selected and/or modified for use in construction of the designer ethanol-production pathway(s). The most essential feature of an enzyme is its active site that catalyzes the enzymatic reaction. Therefore, certain enzyme-protein fragment(s) or subunit(s) that contains such an active catalytic site may also be selected for use in this invention. For various reasons, some of the natural enzymes contain not only the essential catalytic structure but also other structure components that may or may molecular design, it is possible to select the essential catalytic structure(s) for use in construction of a designer DNA construct encoding a desirable designer enzyme. Therefore, in one of the various embodiments, a designer enzyme gene is created by artificial synthesis of a DNA construct according to bioinformatics-assisted molecular sequence design. With the computer-assisted synthetic biology approach, any DNA sequence (thus its protein structure) of a designer enzyme may be selectively modified to achieve more desirable results by design. Therefore, the terms “designer modified sequences” and “designer modified enzymes” are hereby defined as the DNA sequences and the enzyme proteins that are modified with bioinformatics-assisted molecular design. For example, when a DNA construct for a designer enzyme is designed from the sequence of a mitochondrial enzyme, it is a preferred practice to modify some of the protein structures, for example, by selectively cutting out certain structure component(s) such as its mitochondrial transit-peptide sequence that is not suitable for the given application. Therefore, one of the various embodiments flexibly employs the enzymes, their isozymes, functional analogs, designer modified enzymes, and/or the combinations thereof in construction of the designer ethanol-production pathway(s).
As shown in Table 1, many genes of the enzymes identified above have been cloned and/or sequenced from various organisms. Both genomic DNA and/or mRNA sequence data can be used in designing and synthesizing the designer DNA constructs for transformation of host oxyphotobacterial cells to create a designer oxyphotobacterium for photobiological ethanol production (
Table 1 lists examples of enzymes for construction of designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathways.
Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 NADPH-
Thermococcus sp. NADP(H)-dependent;
Entamoeba histolytica NADP-dependent;
Kluyveromyces lactis mitochondrial
Saccharomyces cerevisiae [NADP-adh 6, 7];
Trichomonas vaginalis G3 [NADP-];
Leishmania braziliensis [NADP-];
Botryotinia fuckeliana B05.10 [NADP-];
Aspergillus fumigatus Af293 [NADP-];
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
Kluyveromyces marxianus thermotolerant;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Aeropyrum pernix K1 [NAD,
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Geobacillus thermoleovorans;
Pyrococcus horikoshii OT3;
Thermoanaerobacter brockii [NADP-]
Saccharomyces cerevisiae [NADH-
Entamoeba histolytica NADH-dependent;
Zymomonas mobilis alcohol
Dianthus caryophyllus;
Saccharomyces pastorianus;
Lachancea kluyveri;
Lotus corniculatus;
Giardia lamblia ATCC 50803;
Chlorobium ferrooxidans DSM 13031;
Prosthecochloris aestuarii DSM 271;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. AS9601;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Gloeobacter violaceus PCC 7421;
Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-843;
MAE58620, MAE49340;
Prochlorococcus Marinus MED4;
Synechococcus sp. CC9311;
sync_0822, sync_2669;
Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002;
SYNPCC7002_A0868, _A2590;
Acaryochloris marina MBIC 11017;
AM1_0442, 1335, 4548, D0148;
Synechococcus sp. JA-2-3Ba's (2-13);
CYB_0241, CYB_0338;
Synechococcus sp. JA-3-3Ab;
CYA_0473, CYA_0992;
Prochlorococcus Marinus str. AS9601
A9601_14521;
Synechococcus sp. WH 7803;
SynWH7803_0815, 0871;
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142;
cce_0002, 0206, 4888;
Nostoc Punctiforme ATCC 21933;
Npun_AR200, DF037, F1458;
Chlorobium tepidum TLS;
CT0951, CT1152, CT1275:
Rhodopseudomonas palustris CGA009
RPA2018, RPA3188, RPA0586;
Anabaena sp. PCC 7120
all5334; alr0895; alr0897:
Clostridium beijerinckii [NADP-];
Thermoanaerobacter brockii [NADP-];
Clavibacter michiganensis subsp.
michiganensis NCPPB 382 [NADP-];
Bacillus licheniformis ATCC 14580
Sphingomonas wittichii RW1 [NADPH-];
Polaromonas naphthalenivorans CJ2
Halorhodospira halophila SL1 [NADPH];
Nitrobacter hamburgensis X14 [NADPH-];
Pichia stipitis;
Lodderomyces elongisporus;
Zymomonas mobilis;
Zymobacter palmae;
Lachancea kluyveri;
Acetobacter pasteurianus;
Planctomyces maris DSM 8797;
Sarcina ventriculi;
Psychrobacter cryohalolentis K5;
Legionella pneumophila str. Corby;
Pelobacter carbinolicus DSM 2380;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Lycoris aurea;
Chaetomium globosum;
Citrus sinensis;
Petunia × hybrida;
Candida glabrata;
Saccharomyces kluyveri;
Zea mays;
Rhizopus oryzae;
Lotus corniculatus;
Oryza sativa;
Ajellomyces capsulatus NAm1;
Lodderomyces elongisporus;
Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-843,
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142
Dianthus caryophyllus;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cytoplasm;
Aspergillus fumigatus Af293;
Aspergillus clavatus NRRL 1;
Aspergillus terreus NIH2624;
Aspergillus oryzae;
Aspergillus parasiticus;
Neosartorya fischeri NRRL 181;
Paracoccidioides brasiliensis;
Rhizopus oryzae;
Sarcina ventriculi;
Candida albicans SC5314;
Chaetomium globosum CBS 148.51;
Emericella nidulans;
Hanseniaspora uvarum;
Neurospora crassa;
Kluyveromyces marxianus;
Saccharomyces cerevisiae;
Pinus sylvestris [NAD-dependent];
Fischerella muscicola UTEX 1829 [NAD];
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120 [NAD-];
Stanieria cyanosphaera PCC 7437 [NAD];
Lyngbya aestuarii PCC 7419 [NAD-];
Scenedesmus vacuolatus [NAD-];
Cyanidium caldarium [cytosolic, NAD-];
Cyanidium sp. 3-8 CR [NAD-dependent];
Cyanaphora paradoxa [NAD-dependent];
Euglena sp. CRRdV [NAD-dependent];
Bacillus subtilis [NAD-dependent];
Sardina pilchardus [cytosolic, NAD-];
Blastochloris viridis [NAD-dependent];
Heliobacterium chlorum [NAD-
Rhodospirillum rubrum [NAD-dependent];
Arabidopsis thaliana [NADP-];
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 [NAD(P)-];
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Nodularia spumigena CCY9414;
Anabaena sp. PCC 7120;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9313;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. NATL1A;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Synechococcus sp. CC9902;
Mesostigma viride cytosol;
Triticum aestivum cytosol;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast;
Botryotinia fuckeliana;
Saccharomyces cerevisiae;
Zymomonas mobilis;
Karenia brevis;
Ajellomyces capsulatus;
Pichia stipitis;
Pichia guilliermondii;
Kluyveromyces marxianus;
Triticum aestivum;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942
Xanthobacter flavus [NAD-dependent];
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 (thermo);
Bacillus megaterium;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Chlorobium limicola DSM 245;
Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Synechococcus sp. BL107;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9313;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Synechococcus sp. WH 8102;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Synechococcus sp. WH 7805;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast;
Plasmodium vivax;
Babesia bovis;
Botryotinia fuckeliana;
Monocercomonoides sp.;
Lodderomyces elongisporus;
Pichia guilliermondii;
Arabidopsis thaliana,
Helianthus annuus;
Oryza sativa;
Dictyostelium discoideum;
Euglena gracilis;
Chondrus crispus;
Phaeodactylum tricornutum;
Solanum tuberosum;
Brucella melitensis;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Streptococcus thermophilus LMG 18311;
Geobacillus stearothermophilus;
Bacillus megaterium;
Bacillus subtilis;
Zymomonas mobilis;
Streptomyces coelicolor;
Pseudomonas entomophila;
Clavibacter michiganensis subsp.
michiganensis NCPPB 382;
Methylobacillus flagellatus KT;
Psychromonas ingrahamii 37;
Bartonella henselae str. Houston-1;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Crocosphaera watsonii WH 8501;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cytoplasm;
Aspergillus fumigatus;
Coccidioides immitis;
Leishmania braziliensis;
Ajellomyces capsulatus;
Monocercomonoides sp.;
Aspergillus clavatus;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Zea mays;
Synechococcus sp. JA-3-3Ab;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Prochlorococcus marinus;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Synechococcus sp. WH 8102;
Synechococcus sp. CC9902;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Chlorobium ferrooxidans DSM 13031;
Chlorobium chlorochromatii CaD3;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Geobacillus kaustophilus;
Aeropyrum pernix K1 thermophilic;
Pyrococcus horikoshii thermophilic;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Nodularia spumigena CCY9414;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9312;
Synechococcus sp. CC9902;
Synechococcus sp. CC9311;
Trichodesmium erythraeum IMS101;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Leishmania Mexicana;
Lodderomyces elongisporus;
Babesia bovis;
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum;
Pichia guilliermondii;
Spirotrichonympha leidyi;
Oryza sativa;
Trimastix pyriformis;
Leuconostoc mesenteroides;
Davidiella tassiana;
Aspergillus oryzae;
Schizosaccharomyces pombe;
Brassica napus;
Zea mays;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9313;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Thermococcus kodakarensis;
Selenomonas ruminantium;
Microbispora rosea subsp. Aerata;
Thermoproteus tenax;
Pichia stipitis CBS 6054;
Pichia guilliermondii;
Pichia stipitis;
Lodderomyces elongisporus;
Saccharomyces cerevisiae;
Yarrowia lipolytica;
Hypocrea jecorina (Trichoderma reesei);
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Lyngbya sp. PCC 8106;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Giardia lamblia ATCC 50803;
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum 1980;
Escherichia coli;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cytoplasm;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Lactobacillus reuter;
Nitrosovibrio sp. FJI82;
Nitrosospira sp. TYM9;
Nitrosomonas sp. CNS332;
Phaeodactylum tricornutum;
Bacillus licheniformis;
Corynebacterium glutamicum;
Monocercomonoides sp. PA203;
Aspergillus fumigatus Af293;
Aspergillus clavatus NRRL 1;
Leishmania infantum JPCM5;
Magnaporthe grisea 70-15;
Neosartorya fischeri NRRL 181;
Babesia bovis;
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum;
Trichomonas vaginalis;
Trimastix pyriformis;
Coccidioides immitis;
Glycine max (soybean);
Synechococcus sp. WH 7805;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 2941;
Synechococcus elongatus;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Ajellomyces capsulatus;
Yarrowia lipolytica;
Pichia stipitis;
Dictyostelium discoideum;
Tetrahymena thermophila;
Trypanosoma brucei;
Plasmodium falciparum;
Spinacia oleracea;
Prosthecochloris aestuarii DSM 271;
Streptomyces
coelicolor;
Chlorobium phaeobacteroides DSM 266;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Aeropyrum pernix K1;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Synechococcus sp. CC9902;
Synechococcus sp. BL107;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Nostoc commune;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast;
Fragaria × ananassa cytoplasm;
Homo sapiens;
Babesia bovis;
Trichomonas vaginalis;
Pichia stipitis;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Blastopirellula marina DSM 3645;
Porphyromonas gingivalis;
Escherichia coli K12;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. NATL1A;
Chlorobium limicola DSM 245;
Treponema pallidum;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Rhodobacter sphaeroides;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Geobacillus stearothermophilus;
Moraxella sp.;
Bacillus megaterium;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Synechococcus sp. BL107;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum;
Chlorella pyrenoidosa;
Pichia guilliermondii;
Euglena intermedia;
Euglena longa;
Spinacia oleracea;
Solanum chacoense;
Hordeum vulgare;
Oryza sativa;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9313;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Prosthecochloris aestuarii DSM 271;
Clostridium tetani;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Synechocystis sp.;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Synechococcus sp. WH 7805;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Zea mays;
Chlamydia trachomatis;
Solanum tuberosum (potato);
Shigella flexneri;
Lycopersicon esculentum;
Agrobacterium tumefaciens str. C58;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Thermsynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9313;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;
Phaseolus vulgaris;
Oryza sativa;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Colocasia esculenta;
Amaranthus cruentus;
Parachlorella kessleri;
Triticum aestivum;
Sorghum bicolor;
Astragalus membranaceus;
Perilla frutescens;
Zea mays;
Ipomoea batatas;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Synechococcus sp. WH 8102;
Chlorobium ferrooxidans DSM 13031;
Pelodictyon luteolum DSM 273;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Mesorhizobium loti;
Bacillus sp. WPD616;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Geobacillus stearothermophilus;
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Bacillus licheniformis;
Halothermothrix orenii;
Streptomyces sp.;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9301;
Prochlorococcus marinus sir. NATL1A;
Synechococcus sp. WH 5701;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Trichodesmium erythraeum IMS101;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Lyngbya sp. PCC 8106;
Hordeum vulgare aleurone cells;
J04202;
Trichomonas vaginalis;
Phanerochaete chrysosporium;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Nodularia spumigena CCY9414;
Streptomyces lividans;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Mycobacterium tuberculosis;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Chlorobium limicola DSM 245;
Pelodictyon phaeoclathratiforme BU-1;
Prosthecochloris vibrioformis DSM 265;
Chlorobium phaeobacteroides BS1;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Sulfolobus acidocaldarius;
Sulfolobus shibatae;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301;
Nodularia spumigena CCY9414;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Synechococcus sp. WH 5701;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Synechococcus sp. RS9916;
Synechococcus sp. BL107;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI;
Lyngbya sp. PCC 8106;
Crocosphaera watsonii WH 8501;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102;
Thermus thermophilus;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Synechococcus sp. WH 7805;
Haemophilus influenzae;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Thermoanaerobacterium
thermosulfurigenes;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Hordeum vulgare;
Musa acuminate
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Lyngbya sp. PCC 8106;
Crocosphaera watsonii WH 8501;
Citrus hybrid cultivar root;
Solanum tuberosum chloroplast;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Triticum aestivum;
Ipomoea batatas;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Chlorobium phaeobacteroides DSM 266;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM 8903;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413
Synechococcus sp. JA-3-3Ab;
Nodularia spumigena CCY9414;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Cyanothece sp. CCY0110;
Trichodesmium erythraeum IMS101;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9515;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Oryza sativa plastid;
Ajellomyces capsulatus;
Pichia stipitis;
Lodderomyces elongisporus;
Aspergillus fumigatus;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Populus tomentosa;
Oryza sativa;
Zea mays;
Gluconacetobacter xylinus;
Myxococcus xanthus DK 1622;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Agrobacterium tumefaciens;
Lyngbya sp. PCC 8106;
Synechococcus sp. RS9917;
Synechococcus sp. WH 7805;
Pelodictyon luteolum DSM 273;
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110;
Synechococcus sp. JA-3-3Ab;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Crocosphaera watsonii WH 8501;
Nostoc sp. PCC 7120;
Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413;
Ajellomyces capsulatus;
Pichia stipitis;
Pichia stipitis CBS 6054;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus;
Babesia bovis;
Solanum chacoense;
Oryza sativa;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Bacillus halodurans;
Nitrococcus mobilis Nb-231;
Prochlorococcus marinus sTr. MIT 9211;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9312;
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Synechococcus sp. WH 7805;
Streptomyces lividans;
Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1;
Photobacterium profundum 3TCK;
Sinorhizobium medicae WSM419;
Verminephrobacter eiseniae EF01-2;
Acidobacteria bacterium Ellin345;
Vibrio shilonii AK1;
Sagittula stellata E-37;
Sinorhizobium meliloti 1021;
Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426;
Burkholderia dolosa AUO158;
Burkholderia sp. 383;
Synechococcus elongatus;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9312;
Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303;
Synechococcus sp. CC9605;
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;
Saccharomyces cerevisiae;
Pichia stipitis;
Ajellomyces capsulatus;
Spinacia oleracea cytosol;
Oryza sativa cytoplasm;
Arabidopsis thaliana;
Zea mays;
Methanococcus jannaschii;
Arthrobacter sp. KM;
Arthrobacter sp.;
Crocosphaera watsonii WH 8501;
Nodularia spumigena CCY9414;
Babesia bovis;
Trichomonas vaginalis
Some of the designer enzymes discussed above, such as the alcohol dehydrogenase, pyruvate decarboxylase, pyruvate kinase, enolase, phosphoglycerate mutase, and NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, are known to function in the glycolytic pathway, but generally do not function with the Calvin cycle for photosynthetic ethanol production. Therefore, nucleic acids encoding for these enzymes need to be genetically engineered such that the enzymes are properly expressed to directly interact with the Calvin cycle in creating a desirable designer organism of the present invention. Depending on the genetic background of a particular host oxyphotobacterium, some of the enzymes discussed above may exist at some background levels in its native form in a wild-type host oxyphotobacterium. For various reasons including often the lack of their controllability, however, some of the background enzymes may or may not be sufficient to serve as a significant part of the designer ethanol-production pathway(s). Consequently, nucleic acids encoding for these enzymes also need to be genetically engineered with proper sequence modification such that the enzymes are controllably expressed to create a designer ethanol-production pathway.
Another key feature of the invention is the application of a genetic switch to control the expression of designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-producing pathway(s), as illustrated in
With a controllable designer-enzyme expression mechanism, the cells will not only be able to produce ethanol but also to grow and regenerate themselves when they are returned to conditions under which the designer pathway is turned off, such as under aerobic conditions when designer oxygen-sensitive bidirectional hydrogenase (hox) promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes are used. Designer oxyphotobacteria that contain normal respiratory mechanisms should be able to use the reducing power (NADH) from organic reserves (and/or some exogenous organic substrate such as glucose or acetate) to power the cells immediately after returning to aerobic conditions. Consequently, when the designer oxyphotobacteria cells are returned to aerobic conditions after use under anaerobic conditions for photosynthetic ethanol production, the cells will stop making the ethanol-producing enzymes and start to restore the normal photoautotrophic capability by synthesizing new and functional Calvin-cycle enzymes and producing new cells. Therefore, it is possible to use such genetically engineered designer oxyphotobacteria for repeated cycles of photoautotrophic growth under normal aerobic conditions and efficient production of ethanol directly from CO2 and H2O under certain specific designer ethanol-producing conditions such as under anaerobic conditions.
promoter used to control the expression of designer oxyphotobacterial genes is a promoter that is inducible by anaerobiosis, i.e., active under anaerobic conditions but inactive under aerobic conditions. A designer oxyphotobacterium such as a designer cyanobacterium can perform autotrophic photosynthesis using CO2 as the carbon source under aerobic conditions, and when the designer oxyphotobacterium culture is grown and ready for photosynthetic ethanol production, anaerobic conditions will be applied to turn on the promoter and the designer genes to perform photobiological ethanol production.
A number of promoters that become active under anaerobic conditions are suitable for use in the present invention. For example, the promoters of the anaerobic-responsive bidirectional hydrogenase hox genes of Nostoc sp. PCC 7120 (GenBank: BA000019), Prochlorothrix hollandica (GenBank: U88400; hoxUYH operon promoter), Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 (CyanoBase: sll1220 and sll1223), Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 (CyanoBase: syc1235_c), Arthrospira platensis (GenBank: ABC26906), Cyanothece sp. CCY0110 (GenBank: ZP—01727419) and Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 (GenBank: AAN03566), which are active under anaerobic conditions but inactive under aerobic conditions (Sjoholm, Oliveira, and Lindblad (2007) “Transcription and regulation of the bidirectional hydrogenase in the Cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120,” Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 73(17): 5435-5446), can be used as an effective genetic switch to control the expression of the designer genes in a host oxyphotobacterium, such as Nostoc sp. PCC 7120, Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301, Cyanothece sp. CCY0110, Arthrospira platensis, or Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002.
In another embodiment, the inducible promoter used in the present invention is a nitrite reductase (nirA) promoter, which is inducible by growth in a medium containing nitrate and repressed in a nitrate-deficient but ammonium-containing medium (Qi, Hao, Ng, Slater, Baszis, Weiss, and Valentin (2005) “Application of the Synechococcus nirA promoter to establish an inducible expression system for engineering the Synechocystis tocopherol pathway,” Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 71(10): 5678-5684; Maeda, Kawaguchi, Ohe, and Omata (1998) “cis-Acting sequences required for NtcB-dependent, nitrite-responsive positive regulation of the nitrate assimilation operon in the Cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942,” Journal selected for use to control the expression of the designer genes in a number of oxyphotobacteria according to the concentration levels of nitrate in a culture medium. The nirA promoter sequences that can be selected and modified for use include (but not limited to) the nirA promoters of the following oxyphotobacteria: Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 (GenBank: AP008231, region 355890-255950), Synechococcus sp. (GenBank: X67680.1, D16303.1, D12723.1, and D00677), Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (GenBank: NP—442378, BA000022, AB001339, D63999-D64006, D90899-D90917), Anabaena sp. (GenBank: X99708.1), Nostoc sp. PCC 7120 (GenBank: BA000019.2 and AJ319648), Plectonema boryanum (GenBank: D31732.1), Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 (GenBank: P39661, CP000100.1), Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 (GenBank: BAC08901, NP—682139), Phormidium laminosum (GenBank: CAA79655, Q51879), Mastigocladus laminosus (GenBank: ABD49353, ABD49351, ABD49349, ABD49347), Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413 (GenBank: YP—325032), Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303 (GenBank: YP—001018981), Synechococcus sp. WH 8103 (GenBank: AAC17122), Synechococcus sp. WH 7805 (GenBank: ZP—01124915), and Cyanothece sp. CCY0110 (GenBank: ZP—01727861).
In yet another embodiment, an inducible promoter selected for use is the light- and heat-responsive chaperone gene groE promoter, which can be induced by heat and/or light [Kojima and Nakamoto (2007) “A novel light- and heat-responsive regulation of the groE transcription in the absence of HrcA or CIRCE in cyanobacteria,” FEBS Letters 581:1871-1880). A number of groE promoters such as the groES and groEL (chaperones) promoters are available for use as an inducible promoter in controlling the expression of the designer ethanol-production-pathway enzyme(s). The groE promoter sequences that can be selected and modified for use in one of the various embodiments include (but not limited to) the groES and/or groEL promoters of the following oxyphotobacteria: Synechocystis sp. (GenBank: D12677.1), Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (GenBank: BA000022.2), Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 (GenBank: AP008231.1), Synechococcus sp (GenBank: M58751.1), Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 (GenBank: CP000100.1), Nostoc sp. PCC 7120 (GenBank: BA000019.2), Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413 (GenBank: CP000117.1), Anabaena sp. L-31 (GenBank: AF324500); Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 (CyanoBase: tll0185, tll0186), AF054630), Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 (GenBank: BX572099), Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9303 (GenBank: CP000554), Prochlorococcus marinus str. MIT 9211 (GenBank: ZP—01006613), Synechococcus sp. WH8102 (GenBank: BX569690), Synechococcus sp. CC9605 (GenBank: CP000110), Prochlorococcus marinus subsp. marinus str. CCMP1375 (GenBank: AE017126), and Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 (GenBank: BX548174).
Additional inducible promoters that can also be selected for use in the present invention include: for example, the metal (zinc)-inducible smt promoter of Synechococcus PCC 7942 (Erbe, Adams, Taylor and Hall (1996) “Cyanobacteria carrying an smt-lux transcriptional fusion as biosensors for the detection of heavy metal cations,” Journal of Industrial Microbiology, 17:80-83); the iron-responsive idiA promoter of Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 (Michel, Pistorius, and Golden (2001) “Unusual regulatory elements for iron deficiency induction of the idiA gene of Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942” Journal of Bacteriology, 183(17):5015-5024); the redox-responsive cyanobacterial crhR promoter (Patterson-Fortin, Colvin and Owttrim (2006) “A LexA-related protein regulates redox-sensitive expression of the cyanobacterial RNA helicase, crhR”, Nucleic Acids Research, 34(12):3446-3454); the heat-shock gene hsp16.6 promoter of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Fang and Barnum (2004) “Expression of the heat shock gene hsp16.6 and promoter analysis in the Cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803,” Current Microbiology 49:192-198); the small heat-shock protein (Hsp) promoter such as Synechococcus vulcanus gene hspA promoter (Nakamoto, Suzuki, and Roy (2000) “Constitutive expression of a small heat-shock protein confers cellular thermotolerance and thermal protection to the photosynthetic apparatus in cyanobacteria,” FEBS Letters 483:169-174); the CO2-responsive promoters of oxyphotobacterial carbonic-anhydrase genes (GenBank: EAZ90903, EAZ90685, ZP—01624337, EAW33650, ABB17341, AAT41924, CA089711, ZP—00111671, YP—400464, AAC44830; and CyanoBase: all2929, PMT1568 slr0051, slr1347, and syc0167_c); the nitrate-reductase-gene (narB) promoters (such as GenBank accession numbers: BAC08907, NP—682145, AAO25121; ABI46326, YP—732075, BAB72570, NP—484656); the green/red light-responsive promoters such as the light-regulated cpcB2A2 promoter of Fremyella diplosiphon (Casey and Grossman Fremyella diplosiphont” Journal of Bacteriology, 176(20):6362-6374); and the UV-light responsive promoters of cyanobacterial genes lexA, recA and ruvB (Domain, Houot, Chauvat, and Cassier-Chauvat (2004) “Function and regulation of the cyanobacterial genes lexA, recA and ruvB: LexA is critical to the survival of cells facing inorganic carbon starvation,” Molecular Microbiology, 53(1):65-80).
Throughout this specification, when reference is made to inducible promoter, such as, for example, any of the inducible promoters described above, it includes their analogs, functional derivatives, designer sequences, and combinations thereof. A “functional analog” or “modified designer sequence” in this context refers to a promoter sequence derived or modified (by, e.g., substitution, moderate deletion or addition or modification of nucleotides) based on a native promoter sequence, such as those identified hereinabove, that retains the function of the native promoter sequence.
Furthermore, in one of the various embodiments, certain “semi-inducible” or constitutive promoters can also be selected for use in combination of an inducible promoter(s) for construction of a designer oxyphotobacterial ethanol-production pathway(s) as well. For example, the promoters of oxyphotobacterial Rubisco operon such as the rbcL genes (GenBank: X65960, ZP—01728542, Q3M674, BAF48766, NP—895035, 0907262A; CyanoBase: PMT1205, PMM0550, Pro0551, tll1506, SYNW1718, glr2156, alr1524, slr0009), which have certain light-dependence but could be regarded almost as constitutive promoters, can also be selected for use in combination of an inducible promoter(s) such as the nirA, hox, and/or groE promoters for construction of the designer ethanol-production pathway(s).
DNA Constructs and Transformation into Oxyphotobacterial Cells
DNA constructs are generated in order to introduce designer ethanol-production-pathway genes into a host oxyphotobacterial cell(s). That is, a nucleotide sequence encoding a designer ethanol-production-pathway enzyme is placed in a vector, in an operable linkage to a promoter, preferably an inducible promoter. In a preferred embodiment, nucleic acid constructs are made to have the elements placed in the following 5′ (upstream) to 3′ (downstream) orientation: an externally inducible promoter, a nucleic acid encoding a designer ethanol-production-pathway enzyme(s), and genes (DNA constructs) can be placed into one genetic vector. An example of such a construct is depicted in
In accordance with various embodiments, any of the components a) through d) of this DNA construct are adjusted to suit for certain specific conditions. In practice, any of the components a) through d) of this DNA construct are applied in full or in part, and/or in any adjusted combination to achieve more desirable results. For example, when a redox-responsive bidirectional hydrogenase hox promoter is used as an inducible promoter in the designer ethanol-production-pathway DNA construct, a transgenic designer oxyphotobacterium that contains this DNA construct will be able to perform autotrophic photosynthesis using ambient-air CO2 as the carbon source and grows normally under aerobic conditions, such as in an open pond. When the oxyphotobacterial culture is grown and ready for ethanol production, the designer transgene(s) can then be expressed by induction under anaerobic conditions because of the use of the hox promoter. The expression of the designer gene(s) produces a set of designer ethanol-production-pathway enzymes to work with the Calvin cycle in the designer prokaryote's cytoplasm for photobiological ethanol production (
The two PCR primers are a PCR forward primer (PCR FD primer) located at the beginning (the 5′ end) of the DNA construct and a PCR reverse primer (PCR RE primer) located at the other end (the 3′ end) as shown in
Therefore, the various embodiments also teach the associated method to effectively create the designer transgenic oxyphotobacteria for photobiological ethanol production. This method, in one embodiment, includes the following steps: a) Selecting an appropriate host oxyphotobacterial cells with respect to their genetic backgrounds and special features in relation to photobiological ethanol production; b) Introducing the nucleic acid constructs of the designer genes into the genome of said host oxyphotobacterial cells; c) Verifying the incorporation of the designer genes in the transformed oxyphotobacterial cells with DNA PCR assays using the said PCR primers of the designer DNA construct; d) Measuring and verifying the designer oxyphotobacterium features such as the inducible expression of the designer ethanol-pathway genes for photobiological ethanol production from carbon dioxide and water by assays of mRNA, protein, and ethanol-production characteristics according to the specific designer features of the DNA construct(s) (
The above embodiment of the method for creating the designer transgenic oxyphotobacterium for photobiological ethanol production can also be repeatedly applied for a plurality of operational cycles to achieve more desirable results. In various embodiments, any of the steps a) through d) of this method described above are adjusted to suit for certain specific conditions. In various embodiments, any of the steps a) through d) of the method are applied in full or in part, and/or in any adjusted combination.
Examples of designer ethanol-production-pathway genes (DNA constructs) are shown in the sequence listings. SEQ ID NO: 1 presents example 1 for a detailed DNA construct (1360 base pairs (bp)) of a designer NAD-dependent Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase gene including: a PCR FD primer (sequence by 1-20), a 88-bp nirA promoter (21-108) selected from the Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 (freshwater cyanobacterium) nitrite-reductase-gene promoter sequence, an enzyme-cytosolic NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank accession number: CAC85917), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1033-1340), and a PCR RE primer (1341-1360) at the 3′ end. The 88-bp nirA promoter (21-108) is used as an example of an inducible promoter to control the expression of a designer ethanol-production-pathway Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase gene (DNA sequence 109-1032). The rbcS terminator (DNA sequence 1033-1340) is employed so that the transcription and translation of the designer gene is properly terminated to produce the designer pathway enzyme (NAD-dependent Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase) as desired. The resulting Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase then resumes its function as an enzyme for the designer ethanol-production pathway to work with the oxyphotobacterial Calvin-cycle enzymatic activities in the cytoplasm. The two PCR primers (sequences 1-20 and 1341-1360) are selected and modified from the sequence of a Human actin gene and can be paired with each other. Blasting the sequences against oxyphotobacterial genome databases using the CyanoBase and NCBI/BLAST tools found no homologous sequences of them. Therefore, they can be used as appropriate PCR primers in DNA PCR assays for verification of the designer gene in the transformed oxyphotobacteria.
SEQ ID NO: 2 presents example 2 for a designer Phosphoglycerate Kinase DNA construct (1621 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite-reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a phosphoglycerate-kinase-encoding sequence (109-1293) selected from a Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 phosphoglycerate-kinase sequence (GenBank: BAD77342), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1294-1601), and a PCR RE primer (1602-1621). This designer DNA construct is quite similar to example 1, SEQ ID NO: 1, except that a phosphoglycerate-kinase-encoding sequence (109-1293) selected from a Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 phosphoglycerate-kinase sequence (GenBank: BAD77342) is used. Therefore, this is also an example where the sequence of an exogenous enzyme such as the thermophilic Geobacillus kaustophilus phosphoglycerate kinase can also be used in construction of a designer ethanol-production pathway gene when appropriate with a proper inducible promoter such as the nirA promoter (DNA sequence 21-108).
DNA construct (1990 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite-reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a 9-bp Xho I NdeI site (109-117), a phosphoglycerate-mutase encoding sequence (118-1653) selected from the sequences of a Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM 8903 phosphoglycerate mutase (GenBank: ABP67536), a 9-bp XbaI site (1654-1662), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1663-1970), and a PCR RE primer (1971-1990). This designer DNA construct is also similar to example 1, SEQ ID NO: 1, except that a phosphoglycerate-mutase encoding sequence (118-1653) selected from the sequences of a Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus phosphoglycerate mutase (GenBank: ABP67536) is used and restriction sites of Xho I NdeI and XbaI are added to make the key components such as the designer enzyme sequence (118-1653) as a modular unit that can be flexible replaced when necessary to save the cost of gene synthesis and enhance work productivity. Please note, the enzyme does not have to a Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus phosphoglycerate mutase; a number of phosphoglycerate mutase enzymes (such as those listed in Table 1) including their isozymes, designer modified enzymes, and functional analogs from other sources, such as Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum, Geobacillus kaustophilus, Streptococcus thermophilus, Geobacillus stearothermophilus, Bacillus megaterium, Bacillus subtilis, Zymomonas mobilis, Streptomyces coelicolor, Pseudomonas entomophila, Clavibacter michiganensis, Aspergillus fumigatus, Coccidioides immitis, Leishmania braziliensis, Ajellomyces capsulatus, Monocercomonoides sp., Crocosphaera watsonii, and Aspergillus clavatus, can also be selected for use.
SEQ ID NO: 4 presents example 4 for a designer Enolase DNA construct (1765 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a 9-bp Xho I NdeI site (109-117), an enolase-encoding sequence (118-1407) selected from the sequence of a Cyanothece sp. CCY0110 enolase (GenBank: ZP—01727912), a 21-bp Lumio-tag-encoding sequence (1408-1428), a 9-bp XbaI site (1429-1437) containing a stop codon, a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1438-1745), and a PCR RE primer (1746-1765) at the 3′ end. This DNA construct is similar to example 3, SEQ sequence of a Cyanothece sp. CCY0110 enolase (GenBank: ZP—01727912) is used and a 21-bp Lumio tag (corresponding to DNA sequence 1408-1428) is added at the C-terminal end of the enolase sequence. The 21-bp Lumio-tag sequence (1408-1428) is employed here to encode a Lumio peptide sequence Gly-Cys-Cys-Pro-Gly-Cys-Cys (SEQ ID NO: 58), which can become fluorescent when treated with a Lumio reagent that is now commercially available from Invitrogen [https://catalog.invitrogen.com]. The Lumio molecular tagging technology is based on an EDT (1,2-ethanedithiol) coupled biarsenical derivative (the Lumio reagent) of fluorescein that binds to an engineered tetracysteine sequence (Keppetipola, Coffman, and et al (2003). Rapid detection of in vitro expressed proteins using Lumio™ technology, Gene Expression, 25.3: 7-11). The tetracysteine sequence consists of Cys-Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys-Cys (SEQ ID NO: 59), where Xaa is any non-cysteine amino acid such as Pro or Gly in this example. The EDT-linked Lumio reagent allows free rotation of the arsenic atoms that quenches the fluorescence of fluorescein. Covalent bond formation between the thiols of the Lumio's arsenic groups and the tetracysteines prevents free rotation of arsenic atoms that releases the fluorescence of fluorescein (Griffin, Adams, and Tsien (1998), “Specific covalent labeling of recombinant protein molecules inside live cells”, Science, 281:269-272). This also permits the visualization of the tetracysteine-tagged proteins by fluorescent molecular imaging. Therefore, use of the Lumio tag in this manner enables monitoring and/or tracking of the designer Enolase when expressed to verify whether the designer ethanol-production pathway enzyme is indeed expressed in a host organism as designed. The Lumio tag (a short 7 amino acid peptide) that is linked to the C-terminal end of the Enolase protein in this example should have minimal effect on the function of the designer enzyme, but enable the designer enzyme molecule to be visualized when treated with the Lumio reagent. Use of the Lumio tag is entirely optional. If the Lumio tag somehow affects the designer enzyme function, this tag can be deleted in the DNA sequence design.
SEQ ID NO: 5 presents example 5 for a designer Pyruvate Kinase DNA construct (1888 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a 9-bp Xho I NdeI site (109-117), a Pyruvate-Kinase-encoding sequence (118-1530) selected from a Lumio-tag sequence (1531-1551), a 9-bp XbaI site (1552-1560), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1561-1868), and a PCR RE primer (1869-1888). This DNA construct is similar to example 4, SEQ ID NO: 4, except that a Pyruvate-Kinase-encoding sequence (118-1530) selected from a Selenomonas ruminantium pyruvate-kinase sequence (GenBank: AB037182) is used; this is also another example where a fluorescent molecular Lumio tag (a short 7 amino acid peptide) is used to monitor the expression of a designer enzyme.
SEQ ID NO: 6 presents example 6 for a designer Pyruvate Decarboxylase DNA construct (2188 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a 9-bp Xho I NdeI site (109-117), a Pyruvate-Decarboxylase-encoding sequence (118-1830) selected from the sequences of a Pichia stipitis pyruvate-decarboxylase sequence (GenBank: XM—001387668), a 21-bp Lumio-tag sequence (1831-1851), a 9-bp XbaI site (1852-1860), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1861-2168), and a PCR RE primer (2169-2188) at the 3′ end. This DNA construct is also similar to example 4, SEQ ID NO: 4, except that a Pyruvate-Decarboxylase-encoding sequence (118-1830) selected from the sequences of a Pichia stipitis pyruvate-decarboxylase sequence (GenBank: XM—001387668) is used.
SEQ ID NO: 7 presents example 7 for a designer NAD(P)H-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1441 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a NAD(P)H dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (109-1092) selected/modified from the sequence of a NADP-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (CyanoBase: slr0942), a 21-bp Lumio-tag sequence (1093-1113), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1114-1421), and a PCR RE primer (1422-1441) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 8 presents example 8 for a designer NAD(P)H-dependent Alcohol Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1510 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 nitrite-reductase nirA promoter (21-108), a NAD(P)H dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (109-1161) selected/modified (its mitochondrial signal peptide sequence removed) from X62766), a 21-bp Lumio-tag sequence (1162-1182), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1183-1490), and a PCR RE primer (1491-1510) at the 3′ end. This DNA construct is also similar to example 4, SEQ ID NO: 4, except an NAD(P)H dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (109-1161) selected/modified (its mitochondrial signal peptide sequence removed) from the sequence of a Kluyveromyces lactis alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH3) gene (GenBank: X62766) is used. An NAD(P)H-dependent alcohol-dehydrogenase is capable of using both NADH and/or NADPH in reduction of acetaldehyde to ethanol.
SEQ ID NO: 9 presents example 9 for a designer Phosphofructose-Kinase DNA construct (1405 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Phosphofructose-Kinase-encoding sequence (109-1077) selected from a Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM 8903 phosphofructose-kinase sequence (GenBank: YP—001180606), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (1078-1385), and a PCR RE primer (1386-1405).
SEQ ID NO: 10 presents example 10 for a designer Fructose-Diphosphate-Aldolase DNA construct (1408 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Fructose-Diphosphate-Aldolase-encoding sequence (109-1080) selected from a Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM 8903 fructose-diphosphate-aldolase sequence (GenBank: ABP66792), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (1081-1388), and a PCR RE primer (1389-1408).
SEQ ID NO: 11 presents example 11 for a designer Triose-Phosphate-Isomerase DNA construct (1204 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Triose-Phosphate-Isomerase-encoding sequence (109-876) selected from a Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI triose-phosphate-isomerase sequence (GenBank: YP—001213271), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (877-1184), and a PCR RE primer (1185-1204).
Note, SEQ ID NOS: 1-8 represent a set of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 nirA-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in an together constitute an example of a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) such as the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-branched pathway (01-07 as labeled in
SEQ ID NO: 12 presents example 12 for a designer hox-promoter-controlled NADP(H)-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1865 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 172-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 (Anabaena PCC 7120) hox promoter (21-192), an NADP(H)-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (193-1413) selected/modified from the sequence of a Thermococcus sp. NADP(H)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: U72646), a 432-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 gor terminator (1414-1845), and a PCR RE primer (1846-1865) at the 3′ end. This designer DNA construct is quite similar to example 1, SEQ ID NO:1, except that a 172-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 hox promoter (21-192) and an NADP(H)-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (193-1413) selected/modified from the sequence of a Thermococcus sp. NADP(H)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: U72646) are used. The designer NADP(H)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: U72646) is capable of using NADPH in reduction of acetaldehyde to ethanol. Use of the hox promoter (21-192) enables activation of designer enzyme expression by using anaerobic conditions.
With the same principle of using an inducible hox promoter as that shown in SEQ ID NO: 12 (example 12), SEQ ID NOS: 13-16 show designer-gene examples 13-16. Briefly, SEQ ID NO: 13 presents example 13 for a designer hox-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2351 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 172-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 hox promoter (21-192), a sequence of a Zymomonas mobilis pyruvate decarboxylase (GenBank: AB359063), a 432-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 gor terminator (1900-2331), and a PCR RE primer (2332-2351) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 14 presents example 14 for a designer hox-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct (2414 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 172-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 hox promoter (21-192), a pyruvate-kinase-encoding sequence (193-1962) selected/modified from the sequence of a Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413 pyruvate kinase (GenBank: YP—322211), a 432-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 gor terminator (1963-2394), and a PCR RE primer (2395-2414) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 15 presents example 15 for a designer hox-promoter-controlled Enolase DNA construct (1934 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 172-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 hox promoter (21-192), a pyruvate-kinase-encoding sequence (193-1482) selected/modified from the sequence of an Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413 enolase (GenBank: YP—322211), a 432-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 gor terminator (1483-1914), and a PCR RE primer (1915-1934) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 16 presents example 16 for a designer hox-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Mutase DNA construct (2243 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 172-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 hox promoter (21-192), a phosphoglycerate-mutase-encoding sequence (193-1791) selected/modified from the sequence of a Crocosphaera watsonii WH 8501 (Synechocystis sp. WH 8501) phosphoglycerate mutase (GenBank: ZP—00518183), a 432-bp Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 gor terminator (1792-2223), and a PCR RE primer (2224-2243) at the 3′ end.
Note, SEQ ID NOS: 12-16 represent a set of hox-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in an oxyphotobacterial host such as Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120. They together constitute another example of a designer ethanol-production pathway such as the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched pathway (03-07 as labeled in FIG.-1) in a designer oxyphotobacterium created from a host cyanobacterium such as Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120.
SEQ ID NO: 17 presents example 17 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled NADPH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1663 bp) that includes a heat-responsive groE promoter (21-261), an NADPH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (262-1335) selected/modified from the sequence of a Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 NADPH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: XM—001384263), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1336-1643), and a PCR RE primer (1644-1663) at the 3′ end. This designer DNA construct is quite similar to example 1, SEQ ID NO:1, except that a 241-bp light- and heat-responsive groE promoter (21-261) and an NADPH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (262-1335) selected/modified from the sequence of a Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 NADPH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: XM—001384263) are used. The designer NADPH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: XM—001384263) is capable of using NADPH in reduction of acetaldehyde to ethanol. Use of the groE promoter (21-261) enables activation of designer enzyme expression by using light and/or heat in a culture medium.
With the same principle of using an inducible groE promoter as that shown in SEQ ID NO: 17 (example 17), SEQ ID NOS: 18-21 show designer-gene examples 18-21. Briefly, SEQ ID NO: 18 presents example 18 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2326 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 241-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 light- and heat-responsive groE promoter (21-261), a pyruvate-decarboxylase-encoding sequence (262-1998) selected/modified from the sequence of a Lodderomyces elongisporus NRRL YB-4239 pyruvate decarboxylase (GenBank: XM—001526215), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1999-2306), and a PCR RE primer (2307-2326) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 19 presents example 19 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 light- and heat-responsive groE promoter (21-154), a pyruvate-kinase-encoding sequence (155-1591) selected/modified from the sequence of a Thermococcus kodakarensis pyruvate kinase (GenBank: AB098541), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1592-1899), and a PCR RE primer (1900-1919).
Enolase DNA construct (1778 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 light- and heat-responsive groE promoter (21-154), an enolase-encoding sequence (155-1450) selected/modified from the sequence of a thermophilic Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 enolase (GenBank: BAD77339), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (1451-1758), and a PCR RE primer (1759-1778) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO:21 presents example 21 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Mutase DNA construct (1178 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 light- and heat-responsive groE promoter (21-154), a phosphoglycerate-mutase-encoding sequence (155-850) selected/modified from the sequence of a Streptococcus thermophilus LMG 18311 phosphoglycerate mutase (GenBank: AF442555), a 308-bp Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 rbcS terminator (851-1158), and a PCR RE primer (1159-1178) at the 3′ end.
Note, SEQ ID NOS: 17-21 represent a set of groE-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in an oxyphotobacterial host cell such as Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942; they together constitute another example of a designer ethanol-production pathway such as the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched pathway (03-07 as labeled in
SEQ ID NOS:22-26 show examples 22-26 for another set of designer-ethanol-production-pathway-enzyme DNA constructs using a Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 rbcL promoter in combination with a nirA promoter. Briefly, SEQ ID NO: 22 presents example 22 for a designer rbcL-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Mutase DNA construct (2361 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 621-bp rbcL promoter (21-641) selected/modified from Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 gene rbcL promoter region (GenBank: D13971 region 345-962), a phosphoglycerate-mutase-encoding sequence (642-2177) selected/modified from the sequence of a thermophilic Geobacillus stearothermophilus phosphoglycerate mutase (GenBank: AF120091), a 164-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 gene rbcS terminator (2178-2341), and a PCR RE primer (2342-2361) at the 3′ end.
Enolase DNA construct (2124 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 621-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 rbcL promoter (21-641), a Enolase-encoding sequence (642-1940) selected/modified from the sequence of a thermophilic Aeropyrum pernix K1 enolase (GenBank: BAA81473), a 164-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 gene rbcS terminator (1941-2104), and a PCR RE primer (2105-2124) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 24 presents example 24 for a designer rbcL-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct (2577 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 621-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 rbcL promoter (21-641), a Pyruvate-Kinase-encoding sequence (642-2393) selected/modified from a thermophilic Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM 8903 pyruvate-kinase sequence (GenBank: ABP67416), a 164-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 gene rbcS terminator (2394-2557), and a PCR RE primer (2558-2577).
SEQ ID NO: 25 presents example 25 for a designer nirA-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2083 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp nirA promoter (21-108) of Plectonema boryanum, a Pyruvate-Decarboxylase-encoding sequence (109-1899) selected/modified from a Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 pyruvate-decarboxylase sequence (GenBank: XM—001387532), a 164-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 gene rbcS terminator (1900-2063), and a PCR RE primer (2064-2083).
SEQ ID NO: 26 presents example 26 for a designer rbcL-promoter-controlled NAD(P)H-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1950 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 621-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 rbcL promoter (21-641), a NAD(P)H-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (642-1766) selected/modified from a Kluyveromyces lactis NRRL Y-1140 NAD(P)H-dependent alcohol-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank: XM—451932), a 164-bp Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 gene rbcS terminator (1767-1930), and a PCR RE primer (1931-1950).
Since SEQ ID NOS:22-26 represent a set of rbcL- and nirA-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in a cyanobacteria host such as Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002, they also constitute an example of a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) such as the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched pathway (numerically labeled as 03-07 in
SEQ ID NOS:27-33 show examples 27-33 for yet another set of designer-ethanol-production-pathway-enzyme DNA constructs using a 137-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 groE promoter in combination with a nirA promoter. Since this set of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 groE- and nirA-promoter-controlled designer genes can be used in a Synechocystis host such as Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, they also constitute an example of a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) such as the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-branched ethanol-production pathway (numerically labeled 01-07 in
SEQ ID NO: 28 presents example 28 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Kinase DNA construct (1768 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-157), a Phosphoglycerate-Kinase-encoding sequence (158-1339) selected and modified from a Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI phosphoglycerate-kinase sequence (GenBank: BAF60903), a 409-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 rbcS terminator (1340-1748), and a PCR RE primer (1749-1768).
SEQ ID NO: 29 presents example 29 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Mutase DNA construct (1225 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 groE promoter (21-157), a Phosphoglycerate-Mutase-encoding sequence (158-796) selected from a Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 phosphoglycerate-mutase sequence (GenBank: BAD75751), a (1206-1225).
SEQ ID NO: 30 presents example 30 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Enolase DNA construct (1885 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 groE promoter (21-157), an Enolase-encoding sequence (158-1456) selected from a Aeropyrum pernix K1 enolase sequence (GenBank: BAA81473), a 409-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 rbcS terminator (1457-1865), and a PCR RE primer (1866-1885).
SEQ ID NO: 31 presents example 31 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct (2350 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 groE promoter (21-157), a Pyruvate-Kinase-encoding sequence (158-1921) selected from a Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 pyruvate-kinase sequence (GenBank: BAD77024), a 409-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 rbcS terminator (1922-2330), and a PCR RE primer (2331-2350).
SEQ ID NO: 32 presents example 32 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2245 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 groE promoter (21-157), a Pyruvate Decarboxylase-encoding sequence (158-1816) selected from a Sarcina ventriculi pyruvate-decarboxylase sequence (GenBank: AAL18557), a 409-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 rbcS terminator (1817-2225), and a PCR RE primer (2226-2245).
SEQ ID NO: 33 presents example 33 for a designer nirA-promoter-controlled NAD(P)H-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1594 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 89-bp Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 nitrite-reductase nirA promoter (21-109), a NAD(P)H-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (110-1165) selected from a Kluyveromyces lactis NAD(P)H-dependent alcohol-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank: X62767), a 409-bp Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 rbcS terminator (1166-1574), and a PCR RE primer (1575-1594).
SEQ ID NOS:34-38 present examples 34-38 for a set of designer thermotolerant-enzyme DNA constructs using thermophilic host Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter and rbcS terminator. Briefly, SEQ ID NO: 34 presents example 34 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled thermotolerant Phosphoglycerate-bp light- and heat-responsive Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter (21-154), a thermotolerant phosphoglycerate-mutase-encoding sequence (155-1792) selected from the sequence of a Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum SI phosphoglycerate mutase (GenBank: YP—001213270), a 400-bp Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 rbcS terminator (1793-2192), and a PCR RE primer (2193-2212) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 35 presents example 35 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Enolase DNA construct (1882 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp light- and heat-responsive Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter (21-154), a thermotolerant pyruvate-kinase-encoding sequence (155-1462) selected/modified from the sequence of a thermophilic Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus DSM 8903 pyruvate kinase (GenBank: ABP67535), a 400-bp Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 rbcS terminator (1463-1862), and a PCR RE primer (1863-1882).
SEQ ID NO: 36 presents example 36 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled thermotolerant Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct (1918 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp light- and heat-responsive Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter (21-154), a thermotolerant pyruvate-kinase-encoding sequence (155-1498) selected/modified from the sequence of a Thermoproteus tenax pyruvate kinase (GenBank: AF065890), a 400-bp Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 rbcS terminator (1499-1898), and a PCR RE primer (1899-1918) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 37 presents example 37 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled thermotolerant Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2281 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp light- and heat-responsive Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter (21-154), a thermotolerant pyruvate-decarboxylase-encoding sequence (155-1861) selected/modified from the sequence of a thermotolerant Zymomonas mobilis pyruvate decarboxylase (GenBank: BAF76067), a 400-bp Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 rbcS terminator (1862-2261), and a PCR RE primer (2262-2281) at the 3′ end.
SEQ ID NO: 38 presents example 38 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled thermotolerant and NADP(H)-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1795 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 134-bp light- and heat-responsive Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (155-1375) selected/modified from the sequence of a Thermococcus sp. NADP(H)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (GenBank: U72646), a 400-bp Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 rbcS terminator (1376-1775), and a PCR RE primer (1776-1795) at the 3′ end.
Since SEQ ID NOS: 34-38 represent a set of Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter-controlled and nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in a host Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 and related thermophilic cyanobacterial species, they also constitute an example of a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) such as the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched pathway (03-07 as labeled in
The nucleic acid constructs, such as those presented in the examples above, may include additional appropriate sequences, for example, a selection marker gene, and an optional biomolecular tag sequence (such as the Lumio tag described in example 4, SEQ ID NO: 4). Selectable markers that can be selected for use in the constructs include markers conferring resistances to kanamycin, neomycin, hygromycin, spectinomycin, streptomycin, bleomycin, erythromycin, sulfonyl urea, among others, all of which have been cloned and are available to those skilled in the art. Alternatively, the selective marker is a nutrition marker gene that can complement a deficiency in the host oxyphotobacterium.
Nucleic acid constructs carrying designer genes can be delivered into a host oxyphotobacterium such as a cyanobacterial cell using the available gene-transformation techniques, such as electroporation, PEG induced uptake, and ballistic delivery of DNA, conjugation and natural transformation. For the purpose of delivering a designer construct into the host organism cells, the techniques of electroporation, glass bead, and biolistic genegun can be selected for use as preferred methods. Transformants can be identified and tested based on routine techniques.
The various designer genes can be introduced into host cells sequentially in a step-wise manner, or simultaneously using one construct or in one transformation. For ethanol-production pathway (that consists of alcohol dehydrogenase 07, pyruvate decarboxylase 06, pyruvate kinase 05, enolase 04, and phosphoglycerate mutase 03, as shown with the numerical labels in
According to the photosynthetic ethanol production pathway(s) illustrated in
When an alcohol dehydrogenase that can only use NADH is employed, it may require an NADPH/NADH conversion mechanism in order for the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway (03-07 in
Consequently, in order for a 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway (03-07 in
1,3-DiPGA+NADPH+H+→3-PGAld+NADP+Pi [3]
The NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase catalyzes the oxidation of 3-PGAld by NAD+ back to 1,3-DiPGA:
3-PGAld+NAD++Pi→1,3-DiPGA+NADH+H+ [4]
The net result of the enzymatic reactions [3] and [4] is the conversion of NADPH to NADH. That is, the use of this pair of NADPH-dependent vs. NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases in the oxyphotobacterial cytoplasm constitutes a cyclic “transhydrogenase” redox-shuttle function that can effectively convert NADPH to NADH, which the NADH-requiring alcohol dehydrogenases such as the Zymomonas mobilis alcohol dehydrogenase II can use in reducing acetaldehyde to ethanol. Therefore, in one of the various embodiments, the NADPH/NADH-conversion designer genes in the DNA construct of
When this designer cyclic NADPH/NADH redox-shuttle mechanism is employed, the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway (03-07 in
In certain host oxyphotobacteria, the native NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase activity which functions as part of the Calvin cycle is expressed naturally at such a sufficiently high level that an additional designer NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase may or may not be necessary. Consequently, use of a designer NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase with the native NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in certain host oxyphotobacterium can also confer the needed designer cyclic NADPH/NADH conversion redox-shuttle mechanism. Therefore, in one of the various embodiments, a cyclic NADPH/NADH redox-shuttle-coupled 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway can now be encoded by six designer genes for the following six designer enzymes: NAD-dependent dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase, pyruvate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, and NADH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase. The novelty of this embodiment is the use of an exogenous designer NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase 01 working with an endogenous native NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase to confer and couple the needed designer cyclic NADPH/NADH conversion redox-shuttle mechanism with the 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway (03-07 in
Since the native NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase which functions as part of the Calvin cycle in host oxyphotobacteria is often sufficient in most cases, the key is to include a designer NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenases gene to pair up with the native NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase to provide the NADPH/NADH-conversion mechanism for enhanced photobiological ethanol production. This requirement can be satisfied also by properly selecting an appropriate branching point at the Calvin cycle for a designer mechanism by pathway design according to this embodiment, it is a preferred practice to branch a designer ethanol-production pathway at or after the point of glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate of the Calvin cycle as shown in
SEQ ID NOS:39 and 40 show examples 39 and 40 for a pair of designer NADPH/NADH-conversion-enzyme DNA-constructs (
With the designer NADPH/NADH-conversion-enzyme DNA-constructs (
SEQ ID NOS:42-47 show examples 42-47 for a set of DNA constructs encoding a Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 groE-promoter-controlled designer 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway (03-07 in
Briefly, SEQ ID NO:42 presents example 42 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Mutase DNA construct (1265 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 138-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 (sea-surface oxychlorobacterial strain) heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-158), a Phosphoglycerate-Mutase-encoding sequence (159-845) selected from a Zymomonas mobilis phosphoglycerate-mutase sequence (GenBank: L09651), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 rbcS terminator (846-1245), and a PCR RE primer (1246-1265).
SEQ ID NO:43 presents example 43 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Enolase DNA construct (1877 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 138-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-158), an Enolase-encoding sequence (159-1457) selected from an Aeropyrum pernix K1 enolase sequence (GenBank: NP—148623), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 rbcS terminator (1458-1857), and a PCR RE primer (1858-1877).
SEQ ID NO:44 presents example 44 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct (2093 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 138-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-158), a Pyruvate-Kinase-encoding sequence (159-1673) selected from a Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 pyruvate-kinase sequence (GenBank: XM—001384591), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 rbcS terminator (1674-2073), and a PCR RE primer (2074-2093).
SEQ ID NO:45 presents example 45 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2369 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 138-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-158), a Pyruvate-Decarboxylase-encoding sequence (159-1949) selected from a Pichia stipitis pyruvate-decarboxylase sequence (GenBank: U75310), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 rbcS terminator (1950-2349), and a PCR RE primer (2350-2369).
NAD-dependent Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1586 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 138-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-158), an NAD-dependent Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (159-1166) selected from a Pinus sylvestris glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank: L32560), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 rbcS terminator (1167-1566), and a PCR RE primer (1567-1586).
SEQ ID NO:47 presents example 47 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled NADH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1730 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 138-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-158), an NADH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (159-1310) selected from a Zymomonas mobilis alcohol-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank: M15394), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 rbcS terminator (1311-1710), and a PCR RE primer (1711-1730).
Since SEQ ID NOS:42-47 represent a set of Prochlorococcus marinus MED4 groE promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in a marine oxychlorobacterium host such as Prochlorococcus marinus MED4, they also constitute an example of a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) in a designer oxychlorobacterium, such as a photosynthetic ethanol-producing designer marine Prochlorococcus, in one of the various embodiments for photobiological ethanol production using seawater.
Using Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 groE and nirA promoters, SEQ ID NOS:48-53 show examples 48-53 for another set of DNA constructs encoding a designer 3-phosphoglycerate-branched ethanol-production pathway (03-07 in
controlled NADH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1630 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-157), an NADH-dependent Alcohol-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (158-1210) selected from a Kluyveromyces lactis alcohol-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank: X62766), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 rbcS terminator (1211-1610), and a PCR RE primer (1611-1630).
SEQ ID NO:49 presents example 49 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Decarboxylase DNA construct (2272 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-157), a Pyruvate-Decarboxylase-encoding sequence (158-1852) selected from a Saccharomyces kluyveri pyruvate-decarboxylase sequence (GenBank: AY245517), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 rbcS terminator (1853-2252), and a PCR RE primer (2253-2272).
SEQ ID NO:50 presents example 50 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Pyruvate-Kinase DNA construct (2092 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-157), a Pyruvate-Kinase-encoding sequence (158-1672) selected from a Lodderomyces elongisporus NRRL YB-4239 pyruvate-kinase sequence (GenBank: XM—001528210), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 rbcS terminator (1673-2072), and a PCR RE primer (2073-2092).
SEQ ID NO:51 presents example 51 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Enolase DNA construct (1897 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-157), an Enolase-encoding sequence (158-1477) selected from a Lodderomyces elongisporus NRRL YB-4239 enolase sequence (GenBank: XM—001528071), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 rbcS terminator (1478-1877), and a PCR RE primer (1878-1897).
SEQ ID NO:52 presents example 52 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Phosphoglycerate-Mutase DNA construct (2113 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 heat- and light-responsive groE promoter (21-157), a Phosphoglycerate-Mutase-encoding sequence (158-1693) AF120090), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 rbcS terminator (1694-2093), and a PCR RE primer (2094-2113).
SEQ ID NO:53 presents example 53 for a designer nirA-promoter-controlled NAD-dependent Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase DNA construct (1776 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 nirA promoter (21-420), an NAD-dependent Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase-encoding sequence (421-1356) selected from a Scenedesmus vacuolatus NAD-dependent cytosolic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase sequence (GenBank: CAC81012, AJ252209), a 400-bp Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 rbcS terminator (1357-1756), and a PCR RE primer (1757-1776).
Since SEQ ID NOS: 48-53 also represent a set of Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 groE- and nirA-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes that can be used in another host oxychlorobacteria such as Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 and related oxychlorobacterial species, they also constitute an example of a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) in still another photosynthetic ethanol-producing designer oxychlorobacterium such as a designer Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313, in one of the various embodiments for photobiological ethanol production using seawater.
Furthermore, the pyridine-nucleotide cofactors NADP and NAD both play an essential role in some of the designer oxyphotobacteria where an NADH-requiring alcohol dehydrogenase is used. It is beneficial to ensure that both NADP and NAD are made available to function with the designer pathway(s) for photobiological ethanol production. It is known that NADP could be converted to NAD by a NADP-phosphatase activity (Pattanayak and Chatterjee (1998) “Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate phosphatase facilitates dark reduction of nitrate: regulation by nitrate and ammonia,” Biologia Plantarium 41(1):75-84) and that NAD can be converted to NADP by a NAD kinase activity (Muto, Miyachi, Usuda, Edwards and Bassham (1981) “Light-induced conversion of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate in higher plant leaves,” Plant Physiology 68(2):324-328; Matsumura-Kadota, Muto, Miyachi (1982) “Light-induced conversion of NAD+ to NADP+ in Chlorella cells,” Biochimica Biophysica Acta 679(2):300-300). Therefore, when enhanced the NADPH phosphatase and/or NAD kinase activities. Thus, in one of the various embodiments, the photosynthetic ethanol-producing designer oxyphotobacteria further contain additional designer transgenes (
iRNA Techniques to Further Tame Oxyphotobacterial Regulation Mechanism
In another embodiment of the present invention, the host oxyphotobacterium or oxyphotobacterial cell is further modified to tame the Calvin cycle so that the host can directly produce liquid fuel ethanol instead of synthesizing glycogen (starch), celluloses and other cellular materials that are often inefficient and hard for the biorefinery industry to use. According to the present invention, inactivation of glycogen-synthesis activity is achieved by suppressing the expression of any of the key enzymes, such as, glycogen synthase 11, glucose-1-phosphate (G-1-P) adenylyltransferase 10, phosphoglucomutase 09, and hexose-phosphate-isomerase 08 of the glycogen-synthesis pathway which connects with the Calvin cycle as illustrated in
Introduction of a genetically transmittable factor that can inhibit the glycogen-synthesis activity that is in competition with designer ethanol-production pathway(s) for the Calvin-cycle products can further enhance photosynthetic ethanol production. In a specific embodiment, a genetically encoded-able inhibitor (
Examples of a designer glycogen-synthesis iRNA DNA construct (
SEQ ID NO: 55 presents example 55 for a designer groE-promoter-controlled Glycogen-Synthase-iRNA DNA construct (1408 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 137-bp light- and heat-responsive Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 groE promoter (21-157), a Glycogen-Synthase iRNA sequence (158-988) consisting of a 300-bp sense mRNA fragment (158-457), a 231-bp designer intron-like loop (458-688), and a 300-bp antisense complement fragment (689-988) designed glycogen-synthase sequence (GenBank: BA000039 Region: 789655 . . . 791079), a 400-bp Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 rbcS terminator (989-1388), and a PCR RE primer (1389-1408). This designer Glycogen-Synthase-iRNA sequence (158-988) is designed to inhibit the synthesis of glycogen synthase by the following two mechanisms. First, the 300-bp antisense complement iRNA sequence (corresponding to DNA sequence 689-988) binds with the normal mRNA of the glycogen synthase gene, thus blocking its translation into a functional glycogen synthase. Second, the 300-bp antisense complement iRNA sequence (corresponding to DNA sequence 689-988) can also bind with the 300-bp sense counterpart (corresponding to DNA sequence 158-457) in the same designer iRNA molecule, forming a hairpin-like double-stranded RNA structure with the 231-bp designer intron-like sequence (458-688) as a loop. Experimental studies have shown that this type of hairpin-like double-stranded RNA can also trigger post-transcriptional gene silencing (Fuhrmann, Stahlberg, Govorunova, Rank and Hegemann (2001) Journal of Cell Science 114:3857-3863). Because of the use of a groE promoter (21-157), this designer glycogen-synthesis-iRNA gene is designed to be expressed only in the presence of light and/or heat when needed to enhance photobiological ethanol production by channeling more photosynthetic products of the Calvin cycle into the ethanol-production pathway(s) (such as 01-07, 03-07, and/or 15-23 as labeled in
In yet another embodiment of the present invention, the photobiological ethanol production is enhanced by incorporating an additional set of designer genes (
Another feature is that a Calvin-cycle-branched designer ethanol-production pathway activity (01-07, 03-07, 15-23, and/or 14-23) can occur predominantly during the requires supplies of reducing power (NADPH) and energy (ATP) generated by the photosynthetic water splitting and the light-driven proton-translocation-coupled electron transport process through the thylakoid membrane system. The designer glycogen-to-ethanol pathway (12-23) which can use the surplus sugar that has been stored as glycogen during photosynthesis, can operate not only during the days, but also at nights. Consequently, the use of a Calvin-cycle-branched designer ethanol-production pathway(s) (01-07, 03-07, 15-23, and/or 14-23) together with a designer glycogen-to-ethanol pathway (12-23) enables production of ethanol both during the days and at nights.
Because the expression for both the designer glycogen-to-ethanol pathway(s) and the Calvin-cycle-branched designer ethanol-production pathway(s) is controlled by the use of an inducible promoter such as an anaerobic hox promoter [or a nirA promoter], this type of designer oxyphotobacterial cells is also able to grow photoautotrophically under aerobic (normal) conditions. When the designer oxyphotobacterial cells are grown and ready for photobiological ethanol production, the cells are then placed under the specific inducing conditions such as under anaerobic conditions [or an ammonium-to-nitrate fertilizer use shift, if designer nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production pathway(s) is used] for enhanced ethanol production (
Examples of designer glycogen-degradation genes are shown in SEQ ID NO: 56-61 listed. Briefly, SEQ ID NO:56 presents example 56 for a designer Amylase DNA construct (2470 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), an Amylase-encoding sequence (109-2142) selected from a Prochlorococcus marinus isoamylase sequence (GenBank: YP—001091732), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (2143-2450), and a PCR RE primer (2451-2470).
SEQ ID NO: 57 presents example 57 for a designer 4-alpha-Glucanotransferase DNA construct (1993 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a 4-alpha Glucanotransferase-encoding sequence (109-1665) selected from a Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 4-alpha-Glucanotransferase sequence (GenBank: BAC08259), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (1666-1973), and a PCR RE primer (1974-1993).
DNA construct (2965 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Glycogen-Phosphorylase-encoding sequence (109-2637) selected from a Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 glycogen-phosphorylase sequence (GenBank: BAC09631), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (2638-2945), and a PCR RE primer (2946-2965).
SEQ ID NO: 59 presents example 59 for a designer Phosphoglucomutase DNA construct (2119 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Phosphoglucomutase-encoding sequence (109-1791) selected from a Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 phosphoglucomutase sequence (GenBank: XM—001383281), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (1792-2099), and a PCR RE primer (2100-2119).
SEQ ID NO: 60 presents example 60 for a designer Glucokinase DNA construct (1852 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Glucokinase-encoding sequence (109-1524) selected from a Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 glucokinase sequence (GenBank: XM—001386035), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (1525-1832), and a PCR RE primer (1833-1852).
SEQ ID NO: 61 presents example 61 for a designer Glucose-6-Phosphate-Isomerase DNA construct (2101 bp) that includes a PCR FD primer (sequence 1-20), a 88-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 nirA promoter (21-108), a Glucose-6-Phosphate-Isomerase-encoding sequence (109-1773) selected from a Saccharomyces cerevisiae glucose-6-phosphate-isomerase sequence (GenBank: M21696), a 308-bp Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 rbcS terminator (1774-2081), and a PCR RE primer (2082-2101).
The designer glycogen-degradation genes such as those shown in SEQ ID NO: 56-61 can be selected for use in combination with various designer ethanol-production-pathway genes for construction of various designer glycogen-degradation ethanol-production pathways such as the pathways shown in
Use of Photobiological Ethanol-Producing Designer Oxyphotobacteria with Photobioreactor-Ethanol-Harvesting Processes
The various embodiments further teach how the designer oxyphotobacteria (
The above process to use the designer oxyphotobacteria for photosynthetic CH3CH2OH and O2 production from CO2 and H2O with a biological reactor and ethanol-harvesting (distillation) and gas product separation and collection system can be repeated for a plurality of operational cycles to achieve more desirable results. Any of the steps a) through d) of this process described above can also be adjusted in accordance of the invention to suit for certain specific conditions. In practice, any of the steps a) through d) of the process can be applied in full or in part, and/or in any adjusted combination as well for enhanced photobiological ethanol production in accordance of this invention.
The sources of CO2 that can be used in this process include, but not limited to, industrial CO2, (bi)carbonates, and atmospheric CO2. For an example, flue-gas CO2 from fossil fuel-fired and/or biomass-fired industrial facilities can be fed through a pipeline into a photobiological reactor in this process. The industrial facilities that can generate CO2 supplies for the designer photosynthetic ethanol-production process include (but not limited to): coal-fired power plants, iron and steelmaking industries, cement-manufacturing plants, petroleum refinery facilities, chemical fertilizer production factories, biomass-fired and/or fossil fuel-fired ethanol distillation/separation facilities, biomass-pyrolysis processes, smokestacks, fermentation bioreactors, biofuel-refinery facilities, and combinations thereof.
Alternatively, this designer photobiological ethanol-production process can also use the CO2 in the environment and from the atmosphere as well. Gaseous CO2, dissolved CO2, bicarbonate, and carbonates can all be used by the designer-oxyphotobacteria photobiological ethanol production technology.
This embodiment is illustrated in more details here using designer cyanobacteria as an example. As described above, designer oxyphotobacteria of the present invention, such as the designer cyanobacterium that contains a set of designer hox-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes (for examples, the DNA constructs of SEQ ID NO: 12-16), can grow normally under aerobic conditions by autotrophic photosynthesis using air CO2 as the carbon source in a manner similar to that of a wild-type cyanobacterium. The designer oxyphotobacteria such as designer cyanobacteria can grow also photoheterotrophically using an organic substrate as well. photoautotrophically using air CO2 as the carbon source under the aerobic conditions in a minimal (BG-11) medium that contains the essential mineral (inorganic) nutrients. No organic substrate such as glucose or acetate is required to grow a designer oxyphotobacterium under the normal conditions before the designer ethanol-production-pathway genes are expressed. Most of the oxyphotobacteria can grow rapidly in water through autotrophic photosynthesis using air CO2 as long as there are sufficient mineral nutrients. The nutrient elements that are commonly required for oxyphotobacterial growth are: N, P, and K at the concentrations of about 1-10 mM, and Mg, Ca, S, and Cl at the concentrations of about 0.5 to 1.0 mM, plus some trace elements Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, B, Co, Mo among others at μM concentration levels. All of the mineral nutrients can be supplied in an aqueous minimal medium such as the BG-11 medium that can be made with well-established recipes of oxyphotobacterial culture media using water (freshwater for designer freshwater oxyphotobacteria; seawater for designer marine oxyphotobacteria) and relatively small of inexpensive fertilizers and mineral salts such as ammonium bicarbonate (NH4HCO3) (or ammonium nitrate, urea, ammonium chloride), potassium phosphates (K2HPO4 and KH2PO4), magnesium sulfate heptahydrate (MgSO4.7H2O), calcium chloride (CaCl2), zinc sulfate heptahydrate (ZnSO4.7H2O), iron (II) sulfate heptahydrate (FeSO4.7H2O), and boric acid (H3BO3), among others. That is, large amounts of designer oxyphotobacteria cells can be inexpensively grown in a short period of time because, under aerobic conditions such as in an open pond, the designer oxyphotobacteria can photoautotrophically grow by themselves using air CO2 as rapidly as their wild-type parental strains. This is a significant feature (benefit) of the invention that could provide a cost-effective solution in generation of photoactive biocatalysts (the designer photosynthetic ethanol-producing oxyphotobacteria) for renewable solar energy production.
When the oxyphotobacterial culture is grown and ready for ethanol production, the grown oxyphotobacterial culture is sealed or placed into certain specific conditions, such as anaerobic conditions that can be generated by removal of O2 from the sealed photobiological reactor (
Photosynthetic production of CH3CH2OH and O2 directly from CO2 and H2O in accordance with the present invention can, in principle, have high quantum yield. Theoretically, it requires only 24 photons to produce a CH3CH2OH and 3O2 from water and carbon dioxide by this mechanism. The maximal theoretical sunlight-to-ethanol energy efficiency by the process of direct photosynthetic ethanol production from CO2 and H2O is about 10%, which is the highest possible among all the biological approaches. Consequently, this approach has great potential when implemented properly with an oxyphotobacterial reactor and ethanol-oxygen-harvesting process.
The above process to use the designer oxyphotobacteria for photosynthetic production of CH3CH2OH and O2 from CO2 and H2O with an oxyphotobacterial reactor and an ethanol-harvesting (distillation) and gas product separation and collection process can be repeated for a plurality of operational cycles to achieve more desirable results.
Another feature is that the designer switchable ethanol-production oxyphotobacterium (
Some of the designer oxyphotobacteria could grow photoautotrophically even with the ethanol-production pathway(s) switched on. Whether or how fast a designer oxyphotobacterium could grow under the ethanol-producing conditions may depend on its genetic background and how much of the Calvin cycle products are still available for cell growth after use by the designer ethanol-production pathway(s). Designer oxyphotobacteria that can, under the ethanol-producing conditions, maintain essential cellular functions with an appropriate growth rate can also be used for continuous photobiological production of CH3CH2OH and O2 from CO2 and H2O with a bioreactor and an ethanol-harvesting (distillation) process.
There are additional ways that the switchable designer oxyphotobacteria can be used. For example, the used designer oxyphotobacterial culture from a photobiological ethanol-production reactor does not have to be circulated back to a culture-growth reactor. Instead, the used oxyphotobacterial culture is taken out to be used as fertilizers or biomass feed stocks for other processing because the photoautotrophic growth of the switchable designer oxyphotobacterium in a culture-growth reactor is capable of continuously supplying oxyphotobacterial cells to a is, especially, helpful to using some of the designer oxyphotobacteria that can grow photoautotrophically only before (but not after) the ethanol-production-pathway(s) is switched on. For example, by keeping a continuously growing culture of a designer oxyphotobacterium (that can grow photoautotrophically only before the ethanol-production-pathway(s) is switched on) in a culture-growth reactor, it can provide continuous supplies of grown oxyphotobacterial cells for use in a photobiological ethanol-production reactor. This approach makes it possible to use those designer oxyphotobacteria that can grow only before the ethanol-production-pathway(s) is switched on for photobiological ethanol production as well.
Because of various reasons, some of the designer ethanol-production oxyphotobacteria could grow only photohetrotrophically or photomixotrophically but not photoautotrophically. Use of a culture-growth reactor can also grow this type of designer ethanol-production oxyphotobacteria photohetrotrophically or photomixotrophically using organic substrates including, but not limited to, glucose, fructose, sucrose, acetate, ethanol, methanol, propanol, butanol, acetone, starch, hemicellulose, cellulose, lipids, proteins, organic acids, biomass materials and combination thereof. The so-grown culture can also be supplied to a photobiological ethanol-production reactor for induction of the designer pathways for ethanol production. This modified embodiment on culture growth makes it possible to use those designer oxyphotobacteria that can grow only photohetrotrophically, or photomixotrophically also for photobiological ethanol production as well.
For certain specific designer oxyphotobacteria with designer nitrite-reductase (nirA) promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes, the above photobiological reactor process may be further adjusted to achieve more beneficial results. For example, a designer oxyphotobacterium that contains nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes such as the ones shown in DNA sequence design examples 1-7 (SEQ ID NO: 1-7), can grow normally in a culture medium with ammonium (but no nitrate) by autotrophic photosynthesis using air CO2 in a manner similar to that of a wild-type oxyphotobacterium. This is because the expression of the ethanol-production-pathway genes in this designer oxyphotobacterium will be turned on only in the presence of nitrate as desired owning to the use of nitrite reductase (nirA) promoter in controlling with nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes is that the expression of the designer ethanol-production pathways can be induced by manipulating the concentration levels of nitrate (NO3−) relative to that of ammonium (NH4+) in the culture medium without requiring any anaerobic conditions. That is, the expression of the designer ethanol-production pathway(s) can be induced under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. This enables the designer photobiological ethanol-production process to operate even under aerobic conditions using atmospheric CO2. Likewise, this type of designer oxyphotobacteria with nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes can grow photoautotrophically both under aerobic and anaerobic conditions as well. Therefore, as a further embodiment, the operational process of using designer oxyphotobacteria with nitrite reductase (nirA) promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes is adjusted to the following: a) Growing a designer transgenic oxyphotobacterium photoautotrophically in minimal (such as BG-11) culture medium in the presence of ammonium (NH4+) but no nitrate (NO3−) before inducing the expression of the designer ethanol-production-pathway genes; b) When the designer oxyphotobacterial culture is grown and ready for ethanol production, adding nitrate (NO3−) fertilizer into the culture medium to raise the concentration of nitrate (NO3−) relative to that of ammonium (NH4+) to induce the expression of designer ethanol-production-pathway genes; c) When the designer ethanol-production-pathway enzymes are expressed, supplying visible light energy such as sunlight for the designer-genes-expressed cells to work as the catalysts for photosynthetic ethanol production from CO2 and H2O; d) Harvesting the ethanol product from the photobiological reactor by a combination of membrane filtration and ethanol-distillation techniques.
For certain specific designer oxyphotobacteria with designer groE-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes (for examples, SEQ ID NO: 17-21), their ethanol-production-pathway activities can be controlled by the light and/or temperature conditions. For example, when the designer oxyphotobacteria are used in a sealed transparent plastic reactor, the designer groE-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes can be induced by sunlight and the associated rising temperature (heat) because of the plastic reactor's greenhouse effect upon solar illumination. For some designer oxyphotobacteria with designer rbcL-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway activities are expressed simultaneously with the Rubisco operon expression typically when the light is on.
Depending on the season and geographic location, the temperature in a sealed plastic bioreactor could get as high as about 30-70° C. The designer thermophilic oxyphotobacteria created from a thermophilic host oxyphotobacterium such as Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 with groE-promoter-controlled thermotolerant designer ethanol-pathway genes (for examples, SEQ ID NO: 34-38) are especially suitable for photobiological ethanol production at this type of hot temperature range (30-70° C.).
In addition to ethanol production, it is also possible to use a designer oxyphotobacterium or part of its designer ethanol-production pathway(s) to produce certain intermediate products including: acetaldehyde, pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate, 2-phosphoglycerate, 1,3-diphosphoglycerate, glyceraldehye-3-phosphate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, fructose-1,6-diphosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and glucose-1-phosphate. Therefore, a further embodiment comprises an additional step of harvesting the intermediate products that can be produced also from induced transgenic designer oxyphotobacteria. The production of an intermediate product can be selectively enhanced by switching off a designer-enzyme activity that catalyzes its consumption in the designer pathways. The production of a said intermediate product can be enhanced also by using a designer oxyphotobacterium with one or some of designer enzymes omitted from the designer ethanol-production pathways. For instance, a designer oxyphotobacterium with the alcohol dehydrogenase or pyruvate decarboxylase omitted (or switched off) from the designer pathways (
The present invention also provides an integrated photobiological ethanol production and harvesting technology using a special solar-greenhouse-distillation system (
The integrated solar-greenhouse-distillation system (
In the fundamental photobiological (photosynthetic) process, the photosynthetically active radiation (wavelength 400-700 nm) of sunlight (photons) can be absorbed by photosynthetic pigments such as chlorophylls in photosynthetic organisms (e.g., algae and oxyphotobacteria). Photosynthesis, in general, is the fundamental biological process that converts the electromagnetic energy of sunlight into stored chemical energy that supports essentially all life on Earth. Briefly, the absorption of photons creates excited states (excitations) of photosynthetic pigments (such as Chlorophylls) and the excitation energy is then captured by a vectorial photochemical charge separation at a reaction center pigment such as P680 and P700. The light energy captured by the photosynthetic reaction carters is stored predominately by reduction of CO2, using water as the source of electrons. The key components of the photosynthetic apparatus involved light absorption and energy conversion are embedded in thylakoid membranes. They are two chlorophyll (Chl)-protein complexes: photosystem I (PSI) center, P680. PSII can split water and reduce the plastoquinone (PQ) pool, the cytochrome (Cyt) b/f complex, and plastocyanin (PC), while PSI can reduce ferredoxin (Fd)/nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) and oxidize PC, the Cyt b/f complex and the PQ pool. As a result, the electrons derived from water splitting are transferred to Fd/NADP+, which provides the reducing power for reduction of CO2 to carbohydrate (in the case of wild-type photosynthesis) at the stroma region by a series of enzymatic reactions collectively called the Calvin cycle. Electron transport in the membrane is coupled with proton transport from the stroma into the lumen, generating a proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane. The proton gradient drives phosphorylation through the coupling factor CFo-CF1 to make essential ATP for the reduction of CO2. This is a brief description of wild-type oxygenic photosynthesis.
In a designer transgenic photosynthetic ethanol-producing organism such as a designer alga or designer oxyphotobacterium, the Calvin cycle is tamed typically with a designer ethanol-production pathway(s) so that the products from the Calvin cycle is converted into ethanol (
Note, the theoretical maximum 10% sunlight-to-ethanol energy efficiency also implies that nearly 90% of sunlight energy is dissipated as heat energy (molecular vibrations and thermo infra-red radiation) during the photobiological process. That is, heat generation/dissipation is an intrinsic part of the photobiological process that involves photon absorption, excitation transfer, photochemical charge separation, electron transfer, proton transport, and enzymatic reactions. In addition, certain non-visible portion of the solar radiation such as the infra-red light could also be absorbed by a liquid culture medium generating heat. Consequently, in a photobiological culture medium as shown in
In one of the various embodiments, as illustrated in
As shown in
first greenhouse can be transferred with a condensate-transporting tube into the next greenhouse for re-distillation. According to one of the various embodiments, it is a preferred practice to place the condensate collecting ducts in the first greenhouse high enough so that the condensate collected by the ducts there can flow through a condensate-transporting tube into the next greenhouse by use of gravity without requiring any pumping. As shown in
The second greenhouse shown in
cold-water-bath chamber, a tail-gas condensing tube coil, a gas-condensate chamber, and a vertical venting tube. During the operation, the tail-gas condensing tube coil, gas-condensate chamber, and vertical venting tube are all cooled by running cold water through the cold-water-bath chamber so that the vapor in the tail gas will condense along the condensing tube coil which is connected with gas-condensate chamber before venting through the vertical venting tube. This unit is useful in processing the tail gas from a photobiological ethanol-producing greenhouse. “Tail gas” is certain residual gas such as O2 and N2 that is accumulated during a photobiological process and needs to be removed from the reactor in order for photobiological process to continue. As shown in
Therefore, according to one of the various embodiments, product ethanol and fresh water can also be harvested from the tail gas through use of a tail-gas condensing and venting unit or a number of tail-gas condensing and venting units in series and/or in parallel.
As mentioned before, the solar heat can raise the temperature of a culture medium to as high as about 30-70° C., depending on the geographic location and the season. Therefore, according to one of the various embodiments, it is a preferred practice to use thermophilic designer organisms (such as the designer thermophilic cyanobacteria, which can tolerate this type of heat) for photobiological ethanol production and harvesting.
In another embodiment, a distillation greenhouse comprises a photobiological reactor with a series of culture tubes, adjustable culture inlets and outlets, and/or baffles to guide the flow of the liquid culture medium for enhanced photobiological ethanol production and harvesting efficiency. For example, as the culture is used for photobiological ethanol production coupled with the solar-heat-utilizing greenhouse distillation for ethanol harvesting, the guided flow of the designer-organism culture can facilitate the removal of used culture and enhance proper circulation of the culture medium so that the process can operate continuously with high efficiency. This feature is beneficial, especially, in the integrated multi-greenhouse photobiological ethanol essential (
In another embodiment, a distillation greenhouse comprises a photobiological reactor with a water-chamber transparent ceiling (
In yet another embodiment, as illustrated in
The distillation chamber can also be compartmentalized (or use a number of distillation greenhouses in series and/or in parallel as shown in
In still another embodiment, as illustrated in
According to one of the various embodiments, any number of various distillation greenhouses (such as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and etc) may be used the resulting ethanol concentration in the condensates (distillates) usually increases. The maximum achievable ethanol concentration through this type of fractional greenhouse distillation is 96% ethanol, which is sufficiently high in quality that can be used directly as a fuel to run ethanol-powered and/or flexible-fuel vehicles. Therefore, this process technology is designed to maximally utilize solar (both its visible and infra-red radiation) energy for both photobiological production of ethanol from CO2 and H2O and harvesting of the product ethanol through a series of greenhouse distillations with high efficiency and minimal cost.
Note, sometimes, the product ethanol concentration in a large volume of the photobiological liquid culture medium could be as low as below 0.1% ethanol. It would be impractical to use the conventional ethanol-separation technologies such as the boiler-distillation-column-based ethanol-separation technologies to harvest ethanol from such a low concentration in such a large volume of the liquid live culture medium. However, with the use of the greenhouse distillation technology (
The condensates from the re-distillation are transferred to the third greenhouse (
Furthermore, as mentioned before, use of this photobiological ethanol-production process technology (
As mentioned previously, the temperature in a sealed plastic photobioreactor and/or distillation greenhouse could get as high as about 30-70° C. depending on the designer oxyphotobacteria created from a thermophilic host oxyphotobacterium such as Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 with inducible-promoter-controlled thermotolerant designer ethanol-pathway genes are especially suitable for use in this invention for integrated photobiological ethanol production and ethanol harvesting with solar-heat driven greenhouse distillation at this type of hot temperature range (30-70° C.).
The various embodiments further teach how the designer photosynthetic organisms such as designer oxyphotobacteria including transgenic cyanobacteria may be used with the integrated photobiological ethanol-production and solar-heat-driven greenhouse distillation systems (
The above process to use the designer oxyphotobacteria for photosynthetic CH3CH2OH and O2 production from CO2 and H2O with a combined system of photobiological reactors and ethanol-harvesting distillation greenhouses (
The sources of CO2 that can be used in this process include, but not limited to, industrial CO2, (bi)carbonates, and atmospheric CO2. For an example, flue-gas CO2 from fossil fuel-fired and/or biomass-fired industrial facilities can be fed through a pipeline into a photobiological reactor in this process as illustrated in
such as the designer cyanobacterium that contain a set of designer hox-promoter-controlled designer ethanol-production-pathway genes can grow normally under aerobic conditions by autotrophic photosynthesis using air CO2 in a manner similar to that of a wild-type cyanobacterium. The designer cyanobacterium can grow also photoheterotrophically using an organic substrate as well.
In a preferred embodiment, an inducible designer photosynthetic organism such as a designer oxyphotobacterium is grown photoautotrophically using air CO2 as the carbon source under the aerobic conditions in a minimal (BG-11) medium that contains the essential mineral (inorganic) nutrients. No organic substrate such as glucose or acetate is required to grow a designer oxyphotobacterium under the normal conditions before the designer photosynthetic ethanol-production genes are expressed. Most of the oxyphotobacteria including cyanobacteria can grow rapidly in water through autotrophic photosynthesis using air CO2 as long as there are sufficient mineral nutrients. The nutrient elements that are commonly required for oxyphotobacterial growth are: N, P, and K at the concentrations of about 1-10 mM, and Mg, Ca, S, and Cl at the concentrations of about 0.5 to 1.0 mM, plus some trace elements Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, B, Co, Mo among others at μM concentration levels. All of the mineral nutrients can be supplied in an aqueous minimal medium such as the BG-11 medium that can be made with well-established recipes of oxyphotobacterial culture media using water (freshwater for designer freshwater oxyphotobacteria; seawater for designer marine oxyphotobacteria) and relatively small of inexpensive fertilizers and mineral salts such as ammonium bicarbonate (NH4HCO3) (or ammonium nitrate, urea, ammonium chloride), potassium phosphates (K2HPO4 and KH2PO4), magnesium sulfate heptahydrate (MgSO4.7H2O), calcium chloride (CaCl2), zinc sulfate heptahydrate (ZnSO4.7H2O), iron (II) sulfate heptahydrate (FeSO4.7H2O), and boric acid (H3BO3), among others. That is, large amounts of designer oxyphotobacteria cells can be inexpensively grown in a short period of time because, under aerobic conditions such as in an open pond, the designer oxyphotobacteria can photoautotrophically grow by themselves using air CO2 as rapidly as their wild-type parental strains. This is a significant feature (benefit) that could provide a cost-effective solution in generation of photoactive biocatalysts (the designer photosynthetic ethanol-producing oxyphotobacteria) for renewable solar energy technology (
For example, the photobiological culture reactors in the second and/or third distillation greenhouses (
When necessary, the distillates from the third distillation greenhouse (
The above process to use the designer photosynthetic organisms for photobiological production of CH3CH2OH and O2 from CO2 and H2O and harvesting of product ethanol with integrated greenhouse distillation systems (
For certain specific designer oxyphotobacteria with designer nitrite-reductase (nirA) promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes, the above photobiological reactor process may be further adjusted to achieve more beneficial results. For example, a designer oxyphotobacterium that contains nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes can grow normally in a culture medium with ammonium (but no nitrate) by autotrophic photosynthesis using air CO2 in a manner similar to that of a wild-type oxyphotobacterium. This is because the expression of the ethanol-production-pathway genes in this designer oxyphotobacterium will be turned on only in the presence of nitrate as desired owning to the use of nitrite reductase (nirA) promoter in controlling designer oxyphotobacteria with nirA-promoter-controlled ethanol-production-pathway genes is that the expression of the designer ethanol-production pathways can be induced by manipulating the concentration levels of nitrate (NO3−) relative to that of ammonium (NH4+) in the culture medium without requiring any anaerobic conditions. That is, the expression of the designer ethanol-production pathway(s) can be induced under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions in a photobiological reactor such as the one in the first distillation greenhouse (
In one of the various embodiments, the process further comprises the steps of: h) harvesting the ethanol from the environment by a combination of greenhouse distillation and re-distillation techniques; i) harvesting the residual beer liquid (mostly pure freshwater) after harvesting the product ethanol from the beer liquid; j) harvesting the ethanol and fresh water from the tail gas by using of the tail-gas condensing and venting unit; k) harvesting the used transgenic designer organism that is converted from the induced transgenic organism; and l) repeating steps a) through k) for a continuous photobiological ethanol production and harvesting.
Another feature is that the designer switchable ethanol-production oxyphotobacterium such as a designer cyanobacterium provides the capability for repeated cycles of photoautotrophic culture growth under normal aerobic conditions with a manner similar to that of a wild type and efficient photobiological production of ethanol (
Some of the designer oxyphotobacteria could grow photoautotrophically even with the ethanol-production pathway(s) switched on. Whether or how fast a designer oxyphotobacterium could grow under the ethanol-producing conditions may depend on its genetic background and how much of the Calvin cycle products are still available for cell growth after use by the designer ethanol-production pathway(s). Designer oxyphotobacteria that can, under the ethanol-producing conditions, maintain essential cellular functions with an appropriate growth rate can also be used for continuous photobiological production of CH3CH2OH and O2 from CO2 and H2O and harvesting of product ethanol with greenhouse distillation systems (
There are additional ways that the switchable designer oxyphotobacteria can be used. For example, the used designer oxyphotobacterial culture from a photobiological ethanol-production reactor (
Because of various reasons, some of the designer ethanol-production oxyphotobacteria could grow only photohetrotrophically or photomixotrophically but not photoautotrophically. Use of a culture-growth reactor (
While the present invention has been illustrated by description of several embodiments and while the illustrative embodiments have been described in considerable detail, it is not the intention of the applicant to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications will readily appear to those skilled in the art. The invention in its broader aspects is therefore not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of applicant's general inventive concept.
This Application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Numbers U.S. 61/066,832 filed on Feb. 23, 2008, U.S. 61/066,770 and U.S. 61/066,771 filed on Feb. 22, 2008. The entire disclosures of the three applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US09/34780 | 2/20/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/21/2010 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61066770 | Feb 2008 | US | |
61066771 | Feb 2008 | US | |
61066832 | Feb 2008 | US |