Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Feb 2022)

Thermodynamic Constraints on Electromicrobial Protein Production

  • Lucas Wise,
  • Sabrina Marecos,
  • Katie Randolph,
  • Mohamed Hassan,
  • Eric Nshimyumukiza,
  • Jacob Strouse,
  • Farshid Salimijazi,
  • Buz Barstow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2022.820384
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Global consumption of protein is projected to double by the middle of the 21st century. However, protein production is one of the most energy intensive and environmentally damaging parts of the food supply system today. Electromicrobial production technologies that combine renewable electricity and CO2-fixing microbial metabolism could dramatically increase the energy efficiency of commodity chemical production. Here we present a molecular-scale model that sets an upper limit on the performance of any organism performing electromicrobial protein production. We show that engineered microbes that fix CO2 and N2 using reducing equivalents produced by H2-oxidation or extracellular electron uptake could produce amino acids with energy inputs as low as 64 MJ kg−1, approximately one order of magnitude higher than any previous estimate of the efficiency of electromicrobial protein production. This work provides a roadmap for development of engineered microbes that could significantly expand access to proteins produced with a low environmental footprint.

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