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The PotentialHome production and commercial production are viable options for our biodiesel production methods. See Team Alberta's plan to make a small laboratory process into small scale bio-production and large scale.
Team:Alberta
From 2011.igem.org
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Revision as of 22:58, 27 September 2011
WELCOME
Team Alberta's aim is to aide in the solution of a global problem, the fuel crisis, by thinking locally. In Alberta, our main industrial practices lay within the oil and gas sector; however, we also have a thriving agricultural and forestry-based industry. The industrial processes associated with these industries produce biomass by-products of little economic value. The aim of our project is to convert these by-products into a useful and economically viable fuel, biodiesel.
Previous research has been largely focused on engineering organisms to metabolize cellulose, a highly inefficient approach with very little yield. Here is where our approach differs. Why engineer a new organism to perform a function nature has perfected in another species? Why not just make this organism even better?
We have selected the filamentous, ascomycete fungus Neurospora crassa, which is a natural cellulose metabolizer, with the aim of creating an organism to efficiently make biodiesel. Our fuel will be made by up-regulating fatty acid synthesis and inhibiting beta-oxidation, effectively causing the over-production of fatty acids within N. crassa. From here we will efficiently esterify the fatty acids into fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs), producing a viable fuel.
Ingenuity Sustainability Cost Efficiency
LEARN
ACHIEVE
Team Alberta was able to successfully achieve the following:
- Development of a rapid, systematic method to construct genes for Neurospora crassa N. crassa
- Development and utilization of Neurospora crassa as a suitable synthetic biology chassis
- Creation of x parts for use in future synthetic biology projects
- Outline of the foundations for an economically viable biodiesel
- Design of a self-contained bioreactor apparatus and analysis of our fuel as an economically viable biodiesel
INTERACT