Biofuels and the gene
pool
The power of yeast genetics might make ethanol fuel
much more cost-effective
Your kitchen is stocked with one of the mightiest
tools of modern biology: yeast.
Common, everyday baker’s yeast, living in little packets in your
fridge, and diffused throughout your bread, beer and wine.
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Gregory Stephanopoulos, Hal Alper and Gerald Fink
celebrate their success in creating yeast that shows higher tolerance
for ethanol.
Photo: Donna Coveney/MIT |
This mundane single-cell organism not only allows researchers to beta-test
countless genetic tools (many of which are eventually scaled up for human
cells) but is employed to screen drugs and even to study certain diseases
such as Parkinson’s. For any molecular biologist working today,
it’s hard to overstate the contributions of yeast genetics.
Now, the benefits of so intimately knowing this microscopic life form
are reaching beyond biomedicine into the realm of global warming.
Farming fuel
As politicians finally get serious about the need for the U.S. to decrease
dependency on fossil fuels, there is one partial solution that they all
like: ethanol.
But ethanol isn’t like crude oil. You can’t just drill down
and then catch it as it gushes out. Instead, it takes a lot of energy
to produce this colorless grain alcohol. The trick is to use the least
energy possible to produce the most ethanol allowable.
So far, that’s been an elusive goal.
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Last year, four billion gallons of ethanol were produced in the United
States, while we consumed about 140 billion gallons of gasoline.
Photo: Stockbyte Platinum
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In the United States, ethanol is produced chiefly from corn, and working
with corn demands a lot of energy. Everything from the growing process
to producing fertilizers to harvesting the crop requires oil. Then the
corn needs to be made into sugar, which is turned into ethanol—which
still needs to be distilled prior to commercial use. On top of that,
you need energy to ship the ethanol to regions of the country where corn
isn’t plentiful.
It’s pretty easy for critics to start poking holes in this schematic.
Because when it comes to ethanol as an alternative to oil, the energy
return on the energy investment is much slimmer than desired.
This is precisely where yeast genetics can help.
Whitehead Member and yeast expert Gerald
Fink has teamed up with chemical
engineer Gregory Stephanopoulos of Massachusetts Institute of Technology
to create a genetically altered strain of yeast that promises to make
ethanol production far more efficient—50 percent more efficient.
Ethanol is produced through fermentation. After the corn has been made
into sugar, baker’s yeast metabolizes the sugar, producing ethanol.
But there’s an unfortunate irony to this procedure. Yeast doesn’t
tolerate ethanol very well. In fact, at certain levels, ethanol is toxic
to it. And because yeast is indispensable to the process, there’s
no way of getting around using it. The end result is inefficient production.
Many scientists have tried to engineer ethanol-tolerant strains of yeast,
usually by tinkering with one or two key genes at a time. Hal Alper,
a postdoctoral researcher in both the Fink and Stephanopoulos labs, decided
to take a different approach.
Rather than homing in on a single gene, he thought, why not target a
regulatory molecule that can affect many genes at once?
Power yeast
Transcription factors are nature’s equivalent to circuit breakers.
Much as one circuit breaker activates the electricity in many rooms in
your house, one transcription factor can control the activity of a whole
network of genes in a cell. If the one-gene-at-a-time approach couldn’t
make yeast more tolerant of ethanol, perhaps transcription factors could.
Alper decided to focus on two transcription factors. One of them, called
the TATA-binding protein, yielded startling results in ethanol. When
Alper altered this transcription factor, it over-expressed many genes,
of which at least a dozen proved sufficient to elicit an improved ethanol
tolerance. As a result, this altered strain of yeast could survive high
ethanol concentrations. Over a 21-hour period, it produced 50 percent
more ethanol than normal strains.
“What we have provided is an enabling technology,” says
Stephanopoulos. “A key component of this is that when we think
of a cell that makes a biofuel, the production of that biofuel is not
a property of a single gene or a single enzyme. The production of ethanol
is a property of a whole network of reactions, all of which need to work
together so that the cell can make the molecule at efficient rates.”
The greatest significance of this research is that it opens up a new
avenue for thinking about engineering other desirable properties in a
cell, the researchers say.
“Before this, we had very few tools for improving a process that
is controlled by many genes,” says Alper. “Now others can
apply this approach for making ethanol production or other phenotypes
of interest far more efficient.”
“This is a major contribution,” comments Michael Ladisch,
a professor at Purdue University’s Laboratory of Renewable Resources
Engineering. “This research demonstrates that ethanol tolerance
is not a simple phenomenon. The fact that they’ve identified the
genes involved and can efficiently track them is a major step forward.”
“Yeast has been key to advances in basic biology and medicine,” notes
Fink. “I am very optimistic that this yeast will also contribute
to improving our ability to make alternative fuels.”
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Here's how ethanol fuel is created from corn. Yeast does all the heavy
lifting in the fermentation process.
Illustration: Tom Dicesare
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