Industrializing methanotrophs and other methylotrophic bacteria: from bioengineering to product recovery
Dominic Sauvageau, Lisa Y. Stein, Elizabeth Arenas, Shibashis Das, Maryssa Iacobelli, Mark Lawley, Marina Lazic, Fabián L Rondón, Cerrise Weiblen
Abstract
Microbes that use the single-carbon substrates methanol and methane offer great promise to bioindustry along with substantial environmental benefits. Methanotrophs and other methylotrophs can be engineered and optimized to produce a wide range of products, from biopolymers to biofuels and beyond. While significant limitations remain, including delivery of single-carbon feedstock to bioreactors, efficient growth, and scale-up, these challenges are being addressed and notable improvements have been rapid. Development of expression chassis, use of genome-scale and regulatory models based on omics data, improvements in bioreactor design and operation, and development of green product recovery schemes are enabling the rapid development of single-carbon bioconversion in the industrial space.