Heliyon (Aug 2021)

Hexanol biosynthesis from syngas by Clostridium carboxidivorans P7 – product toxicity, temperature dependence and in situ extraction

  • Patrick Kottenhahn,
  • Gabriele Philipps,
  • Stefan Jennewein

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 8
p. e07732

Abstract

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Clostridium carboxidivorans converts syngas into industrial alcohols like hexanol, but titers may be limited by product toxicity. Investigation of IC50 at 30 °C (17.5 mM) and 37 °C (11.8 mM) revealed increased hexanol tolerance at lower temperatures. To avoid product toxicity, oleyl alcohol was added as an extraction solvent, increasing hexanol production nearly 2.5-fold to 23.9 mM (2.4 g/L) at 30 °C. This titer exceeds the concentration that is acutely toxic in the absence of a solvent, confirming the hypothesis that current hexanol production is limited by product toxicity. The solvent however had no positive effect at 37 °C. Furthermore, C. carboxidivorans cell membranes adapted to the higher temperature by incorporating more saturated fatty acids, but surprisingly not to hexanol. Corn oil and sunflower seed oil were tested as alternative, inexpensive extraction solvents. Hexanol titers were similar with all solvents, but oleyl alcohol achieved the highest extraction efficiency.

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