By talking about your design work on this page, there is one medal criterion that you can attempt to meet, and one award that you can apply for. If your team is going for a gold medal by building a functional prototype, you should tell us what you did on this page. If you are going for the Applied Design award, you should also complete this page and tell us what you did.
Text from Judging Applied Design award:
Best Applied Design: This is a prize for the team that has developed a synbio product to solve a real world problem in the most elegant way. The students will have considered how well the product addresses the problem versus other potential solutions, how the product integrates or disrupts other products and processes, and how its lifecycle can more broadly impact our lives and environments in positive and negative ways.
Introduction
Products from the bioeconomy play an important role in a sustainable future, but are dependent on cheap and available biomass as a carbon source. The availability of sustainable biomass, though, is limited by the arable area of our planet. Even by deforestation and setting up new agricultural area, we cannot provide enough arable land for both biomass for the bioindustry and food crops to solve the problem of world hunger. So if we hardly manage to feed the population, how can we guarantee the supply of biomass for other biotechnological products?
Another important aspect to consider is that most of our everyday products are mainly based on fossil resources. The main source for sustainable products today are plants. However, they are really inefficent in fixing CO2 and need a lot of time, water and space.
The best option would be to use CO2 from the air to form products. Recent technological advancements made it possible to convert CO2 into methanol with a great efficieny. This is where our project comes in. To take a step forward in solving this complex problem, we wanted to develop our E. coli that converts methanol to glycogen.
Glycogen is a sugar polymer that is safe to handle and can be easily converted into glucose. Therefore, it can then be used as a carbon source for almost all existing bioprocessess since those rely on sugar. Our project has the potential to make the bioindustry independent from plants and instead use CO2 from the air. Thereby not only methanol is opened up as a new carbon source but also the CO2 level in the atmosphere is reduced. We connect the bioeconomy with advanced technologies of CO2 fixation.
We decided to use the newly developed, ATP-neutral Methanol Condensation Cycle[1] to enable E. coli to take up methanol. Glycogen accumulation was achieved by combining knocking out one degradation enzyme and overexpressing the synthesis genes.
The main advantage of our product is that it addresses the problem in various ways because not only can the potential of methanol as a carbon source be exploited but also... ( the bioeconomy can get independent of plants and competition of resources between bioindustry products and food products will decrease.)
- Other potential solutions to this global problem are for example the approach of iGEM team Amsterdam where cyanobacteria produce simple carbon compounds using CO2 and sunlight however the technichal process of fixing CO2 that precedes our process, for example the company sunfire, is far more efficient also compared to plants.
The efficency of energy that is converted into chemical energy is about 80 times higher than the conversion of CO2 to biomass through plants and even 18 times higher than the maximal efficieny natural photosynthesis can theoretically have.[2]
team amsterdam: algen für biomasse farmen
anbau energy crops, dafür regenwald abholzen
- syngas auf methan basis, dafür existierende biomasse verwenden: der syngas zwisvhenschritt nimmt viel energie raus
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- how its lifecycle can more broadly impact our lives and environments in positive and negative ways?
References
- ↑ Bogorad IW, Chen CT, Theisen MK, Wu TY, Schlenz AR, Lam AT, Liao JC. Building carbon-carbon bonds using a biocatalytic methanol condensation cycle. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Nov 11;111(45):15928-33. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1413470111. Epub 2014 Oct 29. PubMed PMID: 25355907; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4234558.
- ↑ Die natürliche Photosynthese: Ihre Effizienz und die Konsequenzen - Hartmut Michel