Issue 7, 2013

New biotechnology paradigm: cell-free biosystems for biomanufacturing

Abstract

Cost-efficient production of sustainably-derived biochemicals and biofuels is a critical goal of modern biotechnology. The current predominant biotransformation method is mainly based on microbial fermentation, but this system suffers from a mismatch of engineering and cellular objectives, appropriates a significant fraction of substrate/energy sources for self-replication, and poses significant scaling challenges. Cell-free biosystems for biomanufacturing (CFB2)—complex, cell-free systems that catalyze the conversion of renewable substrates to a variety of products—are emerging as an alternative to fermentation. Within this burgeoning field, a new application is the production of low-value and high-impact biocommodities by CFB2. In this subset, synthetic enzymatic networks are capable of producing numerous desired biocommodities, with the advantages of higher product yields, faster reaction rates, and reduced interference from toxic compounds, among others. In this review, CFB2, with an emphasis on biocommodities production, is compared with microbial fermentation; current applications are presented, illustrating some of the advantages of the system; and remaining challenges are discussed with the path forward for each.

Graphical abstract: New biotechnology paradigm: cell-free biosystems for biomanufacturing

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
02 Apr 2013
Accepted
14 May 2013
First published
14 May 2013

Green Chem., 2013,15, 1708-1719

New biotechnology paradigm: cell-free biosystems for biomanufacturing

J. A. Rollin, T. K. Tam and Y.-H. P. Zhang, Green Chem., 2013, 15, 1708 DOI: 10.1039/C3GC40625C

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