| A Sustainable Flea Circus: Researchers Hope to “Train” Bacteria to Extract Sustainable Biofuel from Cellulosic Biomass | |
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Cellulosic biomass includes woody nonfood crops like trees, brush, and certain grasses. Until now the difficulty has been finding an efficient way to break down the plant cell wall in woody plants in order to extract the sugar molecules needed to produce biofuel. One approach is to develop new bacteria to do the job and the new research involves one likely candidate, Cellvibrio japonicus, a type of bacteria found in soil. Bacteria and Cellulosic Biomass Bacteria and fungi are natural sugar extractors, but not on a commercially viable scale. Working at the Department of Energy’s Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, the researchers have set out to develop a new strain of bacteria that can function far more efficiently. In order to do that they needed to develop a way to analyze the genetic makeup of Cellvibrio japonicus. Until now bacteria have resisted genetic study, but the team achieved a breakthrough by using vector integration, a process that involves the transfer of foreign genetic materials into cells. This procedure enabled the team to induce mutations within any gene in Cellvibrio japonicus. By using the process to disable part of the bacteria’s protein complex, they pinpointed the disctinct enzyme system that the bacteria uses to convert biomass to sugar. The next step is to identify the factors that regulate the system, and determine whether those factors can be manipulated to achieve greater efficiency. Cellulosic Biomass and a Sustainable Future SOURCE: GO MEDIA - Written by Tina Casey - Imate: Poplar trees by Joost J. Baaker Llmuiden on flickr.com.
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