Literature DB >> 26978845

Cell Break: How Cell-Free Biology Is Finally Putting the Engineering Back in Bioengineering.

Shannon Fischer.   

Abstract

In 2011, the California-based company Genomatica reported its success in rigging Escherichia coli microbes to convert sugar into the industrial chemical 1,4-butanediol (BDO). It was a feat of metabolic engineering: BDO is a key ingredient in the production of goods like running shoes, solvents, and spandex. At the time of the company?s announcement, 2.8 billion tons of BDO were produced every year in a multistep, fossil fuel-based process. Genomatica?s system neatly reduced all of that into a cheap, sustainable, one-step fermentation process. The company spent another year refining its technique and finally went commercial with the platform in late 2012. From start to commercialization, the process took about five years.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26978845     DOI: 10.1109/MPUL.2016.2514881

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Pulse        ISSN: 2154-2287            Impact factor:   0.924


  1 in total

Review 1.  Cell-free synthetic biology: Engineering in an open world.

Authors:  Yuan Lu
Journal:  Synth Syst Biotechnol       Date:  2017-03-03
  1 in total

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