Direct fermentation of amorphous cellulose to ethanol by engineered saccharomyces cerevisiae coexpressing trichoderma viride EG3 and BGL1

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Abstract

Direct ethanol fermentation from amorphous cellulose was achieved using an engineered industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain. Two cellulase genes endoglucanase (eg3) and β-glucosidase (bgl1) were obtained from Trichoderma viride and integrated into the genome of S. cerevisiae. These two cellulases could be constitutively coexpressed and secreted by the recombinant strain S. cerevisiae-eb. The enzyme activities were analyzed in the culture supernatants, with the highest endoglucanase activity of 2.34 units/ml and β-glucosidase activity of 0.95 units/ml. The effects of pH, temperature and metal ions on enzyme activities were analyzed. The coexpression strain S. cerevisiae-eb could grow in carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) and utilize it as the single carbon source. The 20 g/L CMC as a model substrate of amorphous cellulose was used in fermentation. The ethanol production reached 4.63 g/L in 24 h, with the conversion ratio of 64.2% compared with the theoretical concentration. This study demonstrated that the eng eered industrial strain S. cerevisiae-eb could convert amorphous cellulose to ethanol simultaneously and achieve consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) directly.

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Gong, Y., Tang, G., Wang, M., Li, J., Xiao, W., Lin, J., & Liu, Z. (2014). Direct fermentation of amorphous cellulose to ethanol by engineered saccharomyces cerevisiae coexpressing trichoderma viride EG3 and BGL1. Journal of General and Applied Microbiology, 60(5), 198–206. https://doi.org/10.2323/jgam.60.198

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