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1.
Interface Focus ; 13(4): 20230001, 2023 Aug 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37303745

RESUMEN

Combining engineering and biology surely must be a route to delivering solutions to the world's most pressing problems in depleting resources, energy and the environment. Engineers and biologists have long recognized the power in coupling their disciplines and have evolved a healthy variety of approaches to realizing technologies. Yet recently, there has been a movement to narrow the remit of engineering biology. Its definition as 'the application of engineering principles to the design of biological systems' ought to encompass a broad church. However, the emphasis is firmly on construction '…of novel biological devices and systems from standardized artificial parts' within cells. Thus, engineering biology has become synonymous with synthetic biology, despite the many longstanding technologies that use natural microbial communities. The focus on the nuts and bolts of synthetic organisms may be deflecting attention from the significant challenge of delivering solutions at scale, which cuts across all engineering biology, synthetic and natural. Understanding, let alone controlling, every component of an engineered system is an unrealistic goal. To realize workable solutions in a timely manner we must develop systematic ways of engineering biology in the face of the uncertainties that are inherent in biological systems and that arise through lack of knowledge.

2.
Chemosphere ; 259: 127418, 2020 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32574848

RESUMEN

This work evaluated the effect of different initial biomass ratios in a co-culture of an alkaliphilic methanotrophic bacteria consortium (AMB) and the green microalga Scenedesmus obtusiusculus (GM) on the maximum CH4 specific biodegradation rate and global carbon uptake. The highest maximum specific biodegradation rate was 589 ± 0.01 mgCH4 gbiomass-1 d-1 obtained for a proportion of 3:1 AMB-GM (w w-1) and 8% of initial CH4 in the headspace. The methane degradation rate was 1.5 times lower than the value obtained solely by the AMB consortium, and it was associated with pH increases due to the evolved CO2 consumption by the microalga. Increased activity of the AMB consortium along the experiments was due to progressive adaptation. Massive sequencing revealed the presence of methanotrophic/methylotrophic species such as Methylocystis sp., Methylomicrobium sp., Methylophaga sp., and Hyphomicrobium sp. Successful complete methane and carbon dioxide uptake was obtained with the 3:1, 4:1, and 5:1 AMB-GM biomass ratios, while for the rest of the ratios tested, more than 70% of the initial methane was transformed into biomass and inorganic carbon. This study showed that methanotrophic-microalgal co-cultures lead to a promising strategy for greenhouse gases mitigation in one step.


Asunto(s)
Biodegradación Ambiental , Gases de Efecto Invernadero , Metano/metabolismo , Microalgas/fisiología , Biomasa , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Técnicas de Cocultivo , Methylocystaceae , Microalgas/metabolismo , Scenedesmus/metabolismo
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