Biofuel production from lignocellulose via thermophile-based consolidated bioprocessing

•Thermophile-based consolidated bioprocessing is the potential way to produce biofuels from biomass.•Thermophile-based CBP offers the potential to simplify operation processes.•Synthetic biology strategy plays a significant role for designing CBP hosts. The depletion of fossil fuels and their impact...

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Veröffentlicht in:Engineering Microbiology 2024-12, Vol.4 (4), p.100174, Article 100174
Hauptverfasser: Le, Yilin, Zhang, Mengqi, Wu, Pengju, Wang, Huilei, Ni, Jinfeng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Thermophile-based consolidated bioprocessing is the potential way to produce biofuels from biomass.•Thermophile-based CBP offers the potential to simplify operation processes.•Synthetic biology strategy plays a significant role for designing CBP hosts. The depletion of fossil fuels and their impact on the environment have led to efforts to develop alternative sustainable fuels. While biofuel derived from lignocellulose is considered a sustainable, renewable, and green energy source, enhancing biofuel production and achieving a cost-effective bioconversion of lignocellulose at existing bio-refineries remains a challenge. Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) using thermophiles can simplify this operation by integrating multiple processes, such as hydrolytic enzyme production, lignocellulose degradation, biofuel fermentation, and product distillation. This paper reviews recent developments in the conversion of lignocellulose to biofuel using thermophile-based CBP. First, advances in thermostable enzyme and thermophilic lignocellulolytic microorganism discovery and development for lignocellulosic biorefinery use are outlined. Then, several thermophilic CBP candidates and thermophilic microbes engineered to drive CBP of lignocellulose are reviewed. CRISPR/Cas-based genome editing tools developed for thermophiles are also highlighted. The potential applications of the Design-Build-Test-Learn (DBTL) synthetic biology strategy for designing and constructing thermophilic CBP hosts are also discussed in detail. Overall, this review illustrates how to develop highly sophisticated thermophilic CBP hosts for use in lignocellulosic biorefinery applications. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2667-3703
2097-4280
2667-3703
DOI:10.1016/j.engmic.2024.100174