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The following NCEs have contributed to the development of the Forum:
GRAND, AGE-WELL, GlycoNet, CFN
Les RCE suivants ont contribué au développement du Forum : GRAND, AGE-WELL, GlycoNet, CFN

Improvement of Genome-scale Metabolic Models for optimizing single carbon bioconversion (T01-P03-LBP1)

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Improvement of Genome-scale Metabolic Models for optimizing single carbon bioconversion (T01-P03-LBP1)

Phase: Theme
Theme:Biomass (T01)
Status:Active
Start Date:2024-11-01
End Date:2026-08-31
Principal Investigator
   Stein, Lisa

Highly Qualified Personnel

Project Overview

As the spectre of climate change looms large, a silent yet potent culprit lurks in our midst: methane, a greenhouse gas that traps heat 80 times more efficiently than carbon dioxide. This stealthy fugitive, often escaping from landfills, agriculture, livestock, and energy industries, poses a vexing challenge for our civilization. Yet, within this environmental gloom, a glimmer of hope emerges from the microscopic world. Methylomicrobium album BG8, a particularly promising bacterium renowned for its methane consumption, offer a dual-purpose solution: mitigating methane’s impact while transforming its peril into valuable bioproducts. Our project aims to harness M. Album potential and transform this scientific insight into an industrial reality, unlocking a sustainable pathway to convert this environmental threat into a sustainable asset for our future.

Our main objective is to enhance methane bioconversion using M. album BG8 for sustainable biotechnological applications such as valuable metabolites, biodegradable plastics and/or biofuels. This effort necessitates a deeper understanding of cellular metabolism and improvement in cultivation techniques, alongside exploring co-culture systems. The key objectives are:

  • Metabolic Model Refinement: Enhance and validate the Genome-scale Metabolic (GSM) model of M. album BG8 integrating multi-omics data and experimental validation.
  • Optimization of Culture Conditions: Developing strategies in bioreactors to improve methane uptake, oxygen availability, growth rates, and metabolite production.
  • Co-cultivation Systems: Design and test symbiotic systems with MABG8 and other microorganisms to enhance methane bioconversion efficiency.
  • In Silico Evaluations: Use computational models to predict and optimize co-cultivation systems and metabolic outputs.
  • Economic and Environmental Impact Assessment: Evaluating the feasibility and sustainability of the methane bioconversion process, contributing to the advancement of synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.