(Press-News.org) University of Minnesota researchers are a key step closer to making renewable petroleum fuels using bacteria, sunlight and dioxide, a goal funded by a $2.2 million United States Department of Energy grant.
Graduate student Janice Frias, who earned her doctorate in January, made the critical step by figuring out how to use a protein to transform fatty acids produced by the bacteria into ketones, which can be cracked to make hydrocarbon fuels. The university is filing patents on the process.
The research is published in the April 1 issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Frias, whose advisor was Larry Wackett, Distinguished McKnight Professor of Biochemistry, is lead author. Other team members include organic chemist Jack Richman, a researcher in the College of Biological Sciences' Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Biophysics, and undergraduate Jasmine Erickson, a junior in the College of Biological Sciences. Wackett, who is senior author, is a faculty member in the College of Biological Sciences and the university's BioTechnology Institute.
"Janice Frias is a very capable and hard-working young scientist," Wackett says. "She exemplifies the valuable role graduate students play at a public research university."
Aditya Bhan and Lanny Schmidt, chemical engineering professors in the College of Science and Engineering, are turning the ketones into diesel fuel using catalytic technology they have developed. The ability to produce ketones opens the door to making petroleum-like hydrocarbon fuels using only bacteria, sunlight and carbon dioxide.
"There is enormous interest in using carbon dioxide to make hydrocarbon fuels," Wackett says. "CO2 is the major greenhouse gas mediating global climate change, so removing it from the atmosphere is good for the environment. It's also free. And we can use the same infrastructure to process and transport this new hydrocarbon fuel that we use for fossil fuels."
The research is funded by a $2.2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy's Advanced Research Projects Agency-energy (ARPA-e) program, created to stimulate American leadership in renewable energy technology.
The U of M proposal was one of only 37 selected from 3,700 and one of only three featured in the New York Times when the grants were announced in October 2009. The University of Minnesota's Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment (IREE) and the College of Biological Sciences also provided funding.
Wackett is principal investigator for the ARPA-e grant. His team of co-investigators includes Jeffrey Gralnick, assistant professor of microbiology and Marc von Keitz, chief technical officer of BioCee, as well as Bhan and Schmidt. They are the only group using a photosynthetic bacterium and a hydrocarbon-producing bacterium together to make hydrocarbons from carbon dioxide.
The U of M team is using Synechococcus, a bacterium that fixes carbon dioxide in sunlight and converts CO2 to sugars. Next, they feed the sugars to Shewanella, a bacterium that produces hydrocarbons. This turns CO2, a greenhouse gas produced by combustion of fossil fuel petroleum, into hydrocarbons.
Hydrocarbons (made from carbon and hydrogen) are the main component of fossil fuels. It took hundreds of millions of years of heat and compression to produce fossil fuels, which experts expect to be largely depleted within 50 years.###
U of M researchers close in on technology for making renewable petroleum
2011-03-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Physics story tops EurekAlert!'s 2010 list of most-visited releases
2011-03-24
The most-visited story on EurekAlert! in 2010 was the discovery of a "golden ratio" in the nanoscale symmetry of solid matter. The finding put forth the new suggestion that matter on the quantum level may possess its own unique, orderly patterns as opposed to chaos.
Stories on the health sciences and medicine also drew significant attention from EurekAlert! users in 2010. The most popular topics varied from neurological diseases including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, to reproductive health, and how proteins and genes influence diabetes and cancer.
Website traffic statistics ...
Send a Flower Basket and Support a Book for the Future of a Child: The Heartwarming Online Flower Delivery Service: Flower 36.5
2011-03-24
Flower 36.5 is a professional online flower delivery service that has introduced a new service called Buy 1 Give 1. Through this service, the flowers that you want to send for the happy smile of your loved one can also lead to the smile of another person in a different part of the world.
The body temperature of humans is 36.5 degrees C, and with the small contribution made through your flower delivery, you can share not only the kindness of your heart but also the opportunity to give happiness. Through an alliance with B1G1 (www.B1G1.com) from Singapore, which introduced ...
Neutron analysis yields insight into bacteria for solar energy
2011-03-24
OAK RIDGE, Tenn, March, 23, 2011 -- Structural studies of some of nature's most efficient light-harvesting systems are lighting the way for new generations of biologically inspired solar cell devices.
Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis and the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory used small-angle neutron scattering to analyze the structure of chlorosomes in green photosynthetic bacteria. Chlorosomes are efficient at collecting sunlight for conversion to energy, even in low-light and extreme environments.
"It's one of the most efficient ...
Long-term study: Robot-assisted prostate surgery is safe
2011-03-24
In the first study of its kind, urologists and biostatisticians at Henry Ford Hospital have found that robot-assisted surgery to remove cancerous prostate glands is safe over the long term, with a major complication rate of less than one percent.
The findings, published online this month by the journal European Urology, follow an earlier Henry Ford study that found nearly 87 percent of patients whose cancerous prostates were removed by robot-assisted surgery had no recurrence of the disease after five years.
"We have always felt that robotic surgery for prostate cancer ...
Researchers explore new treatments to end OA
2011-03-24
Arthritis researchers from North America and Europe will convene in Chicago this week to present new osteoarthritis research that could lead to better ways to detect, treat, prevent and cure osteoarthritis (OA), which affects 27 million Americans. Hosted by the Arthritis Foundation, the Segal North American Osteoarthritis Workshop (SNOW) on March 25-27 will focus on specific forms of OA, such as those that follow joint trauma, obesity and the aging process.
Arthritis is the leading cause of disability in the United States, affecting 50 million adults. The most common ...
Syracuse University chemist develops technique to use light to predict molecular crystal structures
2011-03-24
A Syracuse University chemist has developed a way to use very low frequency light waves to study the weak forces (London dispersion forces) that hold molecules together in a crystal. This fundamental research could be applied to solve critical problems in drug research, manufacturing and quality control.
The research by Timothy Korter, associate professor of chemistry in SU's College of Arts and Sciences, was the cover article of the March 14 issue of Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics. The journal, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, is one of the most prestigious ...
UK Public Urged to Support Petition and Help Save Lollipop People
2011-03-24
The UK public have been urged to back a petition which highlights the importance of lollipop people and road safety in the community.
The petition, which can be signed at www.surveymonkey.com/savethelollipop, was organised by Kwik-Fit Insurance, one of the world's leading car insurance distributors, through its Lollipop Person of the Year campaign.
The Kwik-Fit Insurance Lollipop Person of the Year awards, which have been supporting lollipop people across the country for since 2005, encouraged every primary school in Britain to nominate their lollipop person and ...
Plant oil may hold key to reducing obesity-related medical issues, MU researcher finds
2011-03-24
AUDIO:
James Perfield discusses how the oil is similar to many vegetable oils currently on the market.
Click here for more information.
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Scientists have known for years that belly fat leads to serious medical problems, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hypertension and stroke. Now, a University of Missouri researcher has found a plant oil that may be able to reduce belly fat in humans.
In his latest study, James Perfield, assistant professor of ...
Will the Bear Market Return in 2011?
2011-03-24
But Ronny Skog of http://trend-chart.com's newly launched STOCK MARKET THERMOMETER is confident in his ability to forecast the next bear market.
The free stock market meter measures the current strength of the U.S stock market and give early warnings when a stock market crash is developing, says Skog, a native of Oslo. Although the algorithm will remain my secret, the stockmeter readings are based upon movement of smart money in the market - how much money is flowing into, or out of, the U.S stock market.
According to Skog, the inventor of the stock market thermometer, ...
MicroRNAs: A potential new frontier for medicine
2011-03-24
New York, NY, March 23, 2011 – Since their discovery in the 1990s, microRNAs have proven to play a complex role in normal and abnormal functioning of many organ systems. In the April issue of Translational Research, entitled "MicroRNAs: A Potential New Frontier for Medicine," an international group of medical experts explores several themes related to our current understanding of microRNAs and the role they may play in the future of medicine.
A commentary by Monty Montano, Department of Medicine, Boston University, provides a general introduction to this single-topic ...