| Literature DB >> 33026132 |
Birgit Hoff1, Jens Plassmeier2, Matthew Blankschien3, Anne-Catrin Letzel1, Lauralynn Kourtz4, Hartwig Schröder1, Walter Koch1, Oskar Zelder1.
Abstract
Fermentation as a production method for chemicals is especially attractive, as it is based on cheap renewable raw materials and often exhibits advantages in terms of costs and sustainability. The tremendous development of technology in bioscience has resulted in an exponentially increasing knowledge about biological systems and has become the main driver for innovations in the field of metabolic engineering. Progress in recombinant DNA technology, genomics, and computational methods open new, cheaper, and faster ways to metabolically engineer microorganisms. Existing biosynthetic pathways for natural products, such as vitamins, organic acids, amino acids, or secondary metabolites, can be discovered and optimized efficiently, thereby enabling competitive commercial production processes. Novel biosynthetic routes can now be designed by the rearrangement of nature's unlimited number of enzymes and metabolic pathways in microbial strains. This expands the range of chemicals accessible by biotechnology and has yielded the first commercial products, while new fermentation technologies targeting novel active ingredients, commodity chemicals, and CO2 -fixation methods are on the horizon.Entities:
Keywords: biotechnology; commodity chemicals; fermentation; metabolic engineering; specialty chemicals
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33026132 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202004248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336