Current News

Country:
Operation:
Search for:
Overview Companies Countries Top News
All   Business   Career   Cooperation   Finances   Laws   Manufacturing   Market
People   Politics   Price Development   Products   Research   Technology

Print version | PDF version | Send article | RSS-FeedRSS feed

Bioengineers Succeed in Producing Plastic Without the use of Fossil Fuels

24 Nov 2009 - A team of pioneering South Korean scientists have succeeded in producing the polymers used for everyday plastics through bioengineering, rather than through the use of fossil fuel based chemicals. This groundbreaking research, which may now allow for the production of environmentally conscious plastics, is published in two papers in the journal Biotechnology and Bioengineering.

 
Polymers are molecules found in everyday life in the form of plastics and rubbers. The team, from the KAIST University and the Korean chemical company LG Chem, led by Professor Sang Yup Lee focused their research on Polylactic Acid (PLA), a bio-based polymer which holds the key to producing plastics through natural and renewable resources.
 
"The polyesters and other polymers we use everyday are mostly derived from fossil oils made through the refinery or chemical process,” said Lee. "The idea of producing polymers from renewable biomass has attracted much attention due to the increasing concerns of environmental problems and the limited nature of fossil resources. PLA is considered a good alternative to petroleum based plastics as it is both biodegradable and has a low toxicity to humans.”
 
Until now PLA has been produced in a two-step fermentation and chemical process of polymerization, which is both complex and expensive. Now, through the use of a metabolically engineered strain of E.coli, the team , have developed a one-stage process which produces polylactic acid and its copolymers through direct fermentation. This makes the renewable production of PLA and lactate-containing copolymers cheaper and more commercially viable.
 
"By developing a strategy which combines metabolic engineering and enzyme engineering, we’ve developed an efficient bio-based one-step production process for PLA and its copolymers,” said Lee. "This means that a developed E. coli strain is now capable of efficiently producing unnatural polymers, through a one-step fermentation process,”
 
This combined approach of systems-level metabolic engineering and enzyme engineering now allows for the production of polymer and polyester based products through direct microbial fermentation of renewable resources.
 
Original publications: Taek Ho Yang, Tae Wan Kim, Hye Ok Kang, Sang-Hyun Lee, Eun Jeong Lee, Sung-Chul Lim, Sun Ok Oh, Ae-Jin Song, Si Jae Park, Sang Yup Lee, "Biosynthesis of Polylactic acid and its Copolymers Using Evolved Propionate CoA Transferase and PHA Synthase”; Biotechnology and Bioengineering 2009.
 
Yu Kyung Jung, Tae Yong Kim, Si Jae Park, Sang Yup Lee, "Metabolic Engineering of Escherichia coli for the Production of Polylactic Acid and its Copolymers”; Biotechnology and Bioengineering 2009.
 
Additional information

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)
Korea, Republic of (South Korea)

News
-  Pioneering research succeeds in producing industrially vital chemical through engineered bacteria
-  Controlling zeolite morphologies
 

LG Chem Ltd.
Seoul , Korea, Republic of (South Korea)

Company
-  Buyer's Guide entry of LG Chem Ltd.
 
News
-  An Analysis of the Ethylene Global Market Outlook for 2008
 
MyChemie.DE
Newsletter Subscription
Your e-mail:
Top  
© 1997-2010 Chemie.DE Information Service GmbH
a Life Science Network Division

 www.Chemie.DE   www.Bionity.COM   www.ChemEurope.COM   www.Quimica.ES   www.ChemieKarriere.NET   www.BioKarriere.NET   www.analytica-world.com