Opportunities in bioenergy and biotechnology

Page 1

Frank Sargent

f.sargent@dundee.ac.uk

At the CECHR Symposium 2016 Molecular Microbiology School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Scotland

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Frank Sargent Molecular Microbiology School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee Co-Chair BBSRC Committee B – Plants, Microbes, Food and Sustainability Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


The Bioeconomy landscape Health products & tools Food

Wood, Paper, Fibres, etc.

Synthetic Biology & Industrial Biotechnology

The bioeconomy has policy relevance to many government Departments, for example: BIS interest

DH interest

Defra interest

DECC interest

DfT interest


Why is industrial biotechnology and bioenergy important? SUSTAINABILITY (DECC/DfT/DEFRA) • • • •

Maintaining citizens’ lifestyles in an era of increasing cost of ‘fossil’ hydrocarbon based energy and feedstock chemicals. 80% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. 27% of energy from renewable sources by 2030. End the use of fossil fuels by 2099? (CoP 21)

VALUE TO THE UK ECONOMY •

Estimated at £8B by 2025. (see: Biotech Britain 2015)

HEALTH •

(BIS)

(BIS Strategy for Life Sciences 2013/DoH)

Source of valuable products for improving healthcare (e.g. antibiotics, pharmaceutical intermediates, biopharmaceuticals).

4


Biofuels: (bio)hydrogen as a fuel 

IBB and BBSRC

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Bioenergy ď Ž

What types of biofuels are there?

Bio-mass Bio-hydrogen

Bio-ethanol Bio-methanol

Bio-butanol Bio-diesel

Bio-methane Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


2H2 + O2 → 2H2O Best energy-to-weight ratio of any fuel Wide range of flammability (4-75 %) Low ignition energy

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


also: very low density so difficult to store

1937: New Jersey Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


2H2 + O2 → 2H2O Best energy-to-weight ratio of any fuel Wide range of flammability (4-75 %) Low ignition energy Versatile: can also be used in fuel cells

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Efficient conversion to electricity  

Fuel cell ~60% Engine ~30%

H2 + ½O2  H2O -286 kJ/mol

Anode

Cathode

Proton/Polymer Electrolyte Membrane (PEM) Fuel Cell Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


99% of H2 in current use made by steam reformation of fossil fuel

 Stream

methane reforming

CH4 + H2O  CO + 3H2  The

water-gas shift reaction

CO + H2O  CO2 + H2 Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Bio-H2 production 

1. ‘Dark’ Fermentation enteric bacteria (E. coli), Clostridia, extremophiles

2. Photobiological Hydrogen Production 

purple bacteria, Cyanobacteria, green algae

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


acetate glucose succinate

ethanol

H2 !!

lactate formate A formate dehydrogenase plus a hydrogenase make the formate hydrogenlyase (FHL) complex

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


formate

formate

periplasmic side

cytoplasmic side

PDB code 3Q7K: L端 et al. (2011) Science 332: 352-354 Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


formate

formate

periplasmic side

cytoplasmic side

PDB code 3Q7K: L端 et al. (2011) Science 332: 352-354 Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


formate

periplasmic side

HycD

HycC

cytoplasmic side

formate

‘Hyd-3’

= Ni-Fe cofactor = Fe-S cluster = molybdenum cofactor

PDB code 1FDO: Boyington et al. (1997) Science 275: 1305-1308

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


size exclusion chromatography

MW

metal content (by ICP-MS) 0.1 Mo: 1 Ni: 25 Fe

FHL HycD

HycC

443 200

FdhF, HycB,E,F,G (210,547 Da)

132

HycB,E,F,G (131,174 Da) FdhF only (79,373 Da)

66 BN-PAGE

McDowall et al. (2014) PNAS 111:E3948-56; McDowall et al.(2015) FEBS Letters 589, 3141-3147.

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


H2 production in vitro driven by formate

formate (HCO2-) ď‚Ž CO2 + H2 H2-sensing electrode

gas chromatography

Sodium formate solution (pH 6.5) was added to 50 mM (final concentration) and the reaction was allowed to proceed at 25ËšC. McDowall et al. (2014) PNAS 111:E3948-56 and Conny Pinske (unpublished) Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


EARTH

Nitrogen 0.1-30% Hydrogen CO2

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Nitrogen 0.1-30% Hydrogen CO2

‘forward’

‘reverse’ periplasmic side HycD

HycD

HycC

HycC

cytoplasmic side

H+??

CO2 fixation to formate before the evolution of glycolysis? Nitschke & Russell (2012) J. Mol. Evol. 69: 481–496.

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


‘forward’

‘reverse’ periplasmic side

HycD

HycD

HycC

HycC

cytoplasmic side

H+??

CO2 fixation to formate before the evolution of glycolysis? Nitschke & Russell (2012) J. Mol. Evol. 69: 481–496.

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


HycD

HycC

• hya hyb (no other hydrogenases) • fdhE (no other formate dehydrogenases) • pflA (no way to metabolise formate)

time (min)

Incubate with CO2 and H2 then detect formate production by HPLC Transforming lives

Conny Pinske www.dundee.ac.uk


HycD

HycC

CO2 + H2 ď‚Ž formate (HCO2-)

Incubate with CO2/H2

Detect formate production by HPLC Transforming lives

Conny Pinske www.dundee.ac.uk


ď‚ž

To optimise CO2 conversion using engineered bacteria (Sasol, St Andrews) ď‚ž

To explore conversion of formate to other C1 compounds (Ingenza, Edinburgh)

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Biofuels: (bio)hydrogen as a fuel 

IBB and BBSRC

Transforming lives

www.dundee.ac.uk


Public Engagement

IB Catalyst Research Council Funding

BIVs & Proof of Concept Funds Administered by Network

Network Leadership Network Director Network Manager Management Board

Commercialisation

Innovate UK Funding

International Funding

Scale up and Demonstration

Policy Engagement

ÂŁ18M funding for 13 networks www.bbsrc.ac.uk/bbsrcnibb

IB Catalyst 5 year funding programme BBSRC, EPSRC, Innovate UK ÂŁ45M funding for 2014-15

Seeking funding jointly with Innovate UK and EPSRC

VISION UK bioscience research delivering new products & processes key to the bioeconomy and driving economic growth for the UK and worldwide


BBSRC NIBB (2014-2019) Biorefining

Bioprocessing

Biocatalysis

Novel Chassis

HVC/Natural Products

Cross Cutting

www.bbsrc.ac.uk/bbsrcnib | nibb@bbsrc.ac.uk

29


Encouraging new ideas and academicbusiness interactions (Oct. 2015) Proof of Concept grants • 77 PoC projects awarded, Network spend of ~ £3.1M (total~ £11.4M) • Industry has invested at least £394k (majority in-kind contributions) in 48 PoC projects

Business Interaction Vouchers • 85 BIVs have been awarded after 18 months, Network spend ~ £423k • Industry has invested ~ £469k (majority in-kind contributions) 30


Industrial Biotechnology Catalyst Rounds 1-3: Jan 2014-July 2015 (Round 4 concludes March 2016)

31


IB Catalyst: Scientific Scope and Challenges •

Translation of research on biological processes into industrial processes.

Projects can be academic- or industry-led with collaborating partners.

Challenges • • • • •

Production of fine and speciality chemicals and natural products Production of commodity, platform and intermediate chemicals and materials (e.g. plastics, resins, textiles). Production of liquid and gaseous biofuels. Production of (glyco) peptides and proteins (e.g. antibiotics, recombinant biologics). Novel or improved upstream or downstream processes to reduce costs or improve efficiency. To consider the economic, environmental and social impacts of the research.

Industrial Biotechnology Catalyst


IB Catalyst: Headline figures •

235 projects have applied to the IB Catalyst requesting a total of £309 million.

• A total of 66 projects have been funded relating to £58.8 million in grants. • Across the 66 funded projects £11.9 million has been leveraged from industrial partners: 20% leverage.

Industrial Biotechnology Catalyst


Is there any evidence for BBSRC NIBB activities and success under the IB Catalyst? IB Carb: two successful proposals in R2 Translation on chemoenzymatic transformations in glycoscience. HVCfP: R2 Industrial Research on Industrial saponins (company-led) LBNet/BioCatNet: R2: Feasibility of the manufacture of bio-based polyester from cellulose (company-led) CBM Net: R3 Translation on engineering resistance to toxic products. Metals in Biology: R3 Translation on Enzyme catalysed chemical synthesis using hydrogen gas (initially a BIV). BIOCatNet: R3 Translation: Biocatalysts for active pharmaceutical ingredients.

Industrial Biotechnology Catalyst


Future funding opportunities Spending review-dependent managed activities: • IB Catalyst Round 5 (scheduled to open Spring 2016). • EC Co-Fund Biotechnology (Combined IB/SynBio/SystemsBio ERANetlike mechanism). Global Challenge Research Fund (GCRF) • Announced in the Comprehensive Spending Review: £1.5Bn fund to support UK research of relevance to developing countries. • Alignment with UK Gov. Official Development Assistance objectives which has promotion of economic development and welfare as the key aims. • BBSRC has identified immediate contributions such as agriculture/food security/ diet and health as its initial areas. • Broader activities in biotechnology including use of wastes and residues and supporting technologies (eg big data) will also have impacts. 35


Key Past Members Dr Magali Roger - BBSRC-funded postdoc

Dr Marta Albareda Contreras - H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow Mr Ciaran Lamont - BBSRC-funded PhD student Ms Marília de Assis Alcoforado Costa - CAPES-funded PhD student Mr Richard Owen - MRC-funded PhD student Ms Lucia Licandro Lado - Dundee-funded PhD student Mr Alex Finney - BBSRC-funded PhD student

Dr Jen McDowall (Bath)

Dr Lisa Bowman (Imperial) Dr Ciarán Kelly (Imperial) Dr Conny Pinske (Halle)

Collaborators Prof Fraser Armstrong (Oxford) Prof Gary Sawers (Halle) Prof Bill Hunter (Dundee) Prof Tracy Palmer (Dundee) Dr Alison Parkin (York)


Thanks to‌‌.. Dr Colin Miles Head of Strategy, Industrial Biotechnology and Bioenergy colin.miles@bbsrc.ac.uk

37


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.