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L-Lactate Production from Seaweed Hydrolysate of Laminaria japonica Using Metabolically Engineered Escherichia coli

Authors
Mazumdar, SumanBang, JunhoOh, Min-Kyu
Issue Date
2월-2014
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
L-Lactate; Mannitol; Seaweed; Metabolic engineering; Escherichia coli
Citation
APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, v.172, no.4, pp.1938 - 1952
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume
172
Number
4
Start Page
1938
End Page
1952
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/99429
DOI
10.1007/s12010-013-0653-9
ISSN
0273-2289
Abstract
Renewable and carbon neutral, marine algal biomass could be an attractive alternative substrate for the production of biofuel and various biorefinery products. Thus, the feasibility of brown seaweed (Laminaria japonica) hydrolysate as a carbon source was investigated here for L-lactate production. This work reports the homofermentative route for L-lactate production by introducing Streptococcus bovis/equinus L-lactate dehydrogenase in an engineered Escherichia coli strain where synthesis of the competing by-product was blocked. The engineered strain utilized both glucose and mannitol present in the hydrolysate under microaerobic condition and produced 37.7 g/L of high optical purity L-lactate at 80 % of the maximum theoretical value. The result shown in this study implies that algal biomass would be as competitive with lignocellulosic biomass in terms of lactic acid production and that brown seaweed can be used as a feedstock for the industrial production of other chemicals.
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