Biohybrids for Solar Chemicals and Fuels: Whole-cell Photocatalysis by Non-photosynthetic Organisms

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: Chemistry

Abstract

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Technical Summary

We propose to tap into sunlight, an underutilised source of clean power, and address the direct exchange of electrons between bacterial cells and inorganic photocatalysts for the biophotocatalytic production of solar chemicals including fuels. Current state-of-the-art technology, referred to as "bionic leaf", relies on the transfer of energy via intermediates such as hydrogen. By contrast, recent results from the applicants indicate that cytochromes purified from the extracellular respiratory machinery of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 (MR-1) enable direct exchange of solar energy with synthetic photosensitisers. The MR-1 extracellular respiratory machinery exchanges energy/electrons across the bacterial outer membrane. To this end, we propose a novel synthetic biology approach in which bespoke photocatalysts are directly coupled to the extracellular cytochromes of MR-1 in vivo. Modular biohybrid assemblies will be produced that use intracellular redox transformations to sustain light-driven extracellular catalysis thereby closing the redox loop and enabling self-sustaining production of solar fuels. Two proof-of-principle light-driven reactions are proposed: (a) MR-1 catalysed reductions, such as protons to hydrogen or carbon dioxide to formate, coupled to inorganic photo-oxidation of industrially-relevant alcohols to aldehydes, and (b) MR-1 catalysed oxidation of glycerol (a major underutilised by-product of biodiesel production) to ethanol coupled to the inorganic photo-reduction of carbon dioxide to formate.

Planned Impact

Societal Impact:

Renewable energy is recognised as a top national strategic priority (UK White Paper on Energy). Several incidents have demonstrated the fragility of the global energy supply such as the outbreak of conflicts and civil wars in the Middle-East and the ecological and humanitarian threat of a nuclear meltdown in Fukushima, Japan. The search for alternative energy sources is therefore of major GLOBAL importance. The Paris Agreement in 2015 has set out a global strategy to minimise the impact of climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions. A solution to this problem has to be sought by combining a multitude of complementary 'alternative' energy sources; this research will contribute to this progress. Specifically, we aim to use synthetic biology, protein engineering, (bio)nanotechnology and chemistry to develop bacterial biohybrids that harvest solar energy for novel and innovative approaches to produce value added chemicals and fuels. For example, with our industrial partner, we will explore MR-1 oxidation of glycerol to ethanol and CO2 coupled to external light-driven inorganic reduction of CO2 to formate. This carbon-neutral reaction photocatalysis would add considerable value to glycerol, a low-commodity chemical, through the production of two fuels. In the US, approximately 1 kg of crude glycerol is produced for every 10 kg of biodiesel which equates to the production of approximately 0.8 x 10^9 kg of glycerol in 2016 .

Technological Impact:

The state-of-the-art in solar-driven microbial catalytic systems, 'bionic leaf' technology, first produces hydrogen and, in a second step, uses this hydrogen as an energy vector to drive downstream bioproduction of higher value compounds, e.g. reduction of CO2 to fusel alcohols by Ralstonia. This proposal presents fundamental research that aims to advance the state-of-the-art by directly coupling the photocatalyst and microbial catalytic systems. We envisage that successful completion of this project will demonstrate proof-of-principle for a disruptive technology contributing to the future design of hybrid bacterial-inorganic (photo-)catalytic systems for chemical conversions including those requiring NAD(P)+/NADPH recycling.

Conjugation between inorganic materials and biomacromolecules has wide-ranging relevance to technology, including bioenergy (as proposed here), health technology, e.g. drug delivery and the development of novel probes for cellular localisation and trafficking. We envisage that our research will also be of immediate impact in the development of emerging technologies for electrically interfacing living systems and abiotic materials. In this area, our research could impact the development of artificial vision and light-dependent sensing/signalling pathways.

Impact through Collaborations and Training:

This project will consolidate the recently formed partnership between Butt, Clarke (UEA), Jeuken (Leeds) and Reisner (Cambridge). The project will extent the partnership to Gralnick (USA), who will bring expertise in engineering Shewanella for targeted biotransformations, and the Molecular Foundry, who will bring expertise for the analysis of protein-nanoparticle conjugates. Within this project we will also provide top-quality cross-disciplinary training for three BBSRC PDRAs and a research technician, to provide expertise in the development of alternative energy biotechnologies, an area of critical scientific, technological and economic importance for the future.
 
Description The project has started in October 2019 and we have already prepared a series of carbon dots for coupling the heme-containing transmembrane proteins. The bio-conjugates are currently being characterised and studies involving in vitro and in vivo photocatalysis have commenced. A detailed study on carbon size dependent activity has also been completed. Carbon nitrides have also been reported for photocatalysis.
Exploitation Route The project has started in October 2019 and complete findings will be reported soon.
Sectors Chemicals,Environment

URL http://www-reisner.ch.cam.ac.uk/
 
Title Data set for Visible-light Promoted C-O Bond Formation with an Integrated Carbon Nitride-Nickel Heterogeneous Photocatalyst 
Description NMR - contains all NMR data (.doc, fid file) Mass result- contains all mass analysis (pdf, png) Other Characterization - contains UV-Vis, ATR-IR, XRD, XPS and ICP data (Origin, Excel) TEM - contains all TEM images (.tif) 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/317545
 
Title Photocatalytic Removal of the Greenhouse Gas Nitrous Oxide by Liposomal Microreactors Piper et al 
Description Data from spectroscopy and gas chromatography with corresponding plots of analyte concentration with time. Data from dynamic light scattering and mass spectrometry (LC-MS) 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Photocatalytic_Removal_of_the_Greenhouse_Gas_Nitrous_Oxide_by_...
 
Title Photocatalytic Removal of the Greenhouse Gas Nitrous Oxide by Liposomal Microreactors Piper et al 
Description Data from spectroscopy and gas chromatography with corresponding plots of analyte concentration with time. Data from dynamic light scattering and mass spectrometry (LC-MS) 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Photocatalytic_Removal_of_the_Greenhouse_Gas_Nitrous_Oxide_by_...
 
Title Raw data for "Engineering electro- and photocatalytic carbon materials for CO2 reduction by formate dehydrogenase" 
Description Data from main text contains all Electrochemical, QCM, ATR-IR and photocatalysis python scripts for data analysis and image data related to main text sorted by respective figure. Data from Supporting Information contains all FT-IR, UV-vis, XPS, Zeta potential, electrochemical, ATR-IR and photocatalysis python scripts and image data related to the extended dataset sorted by respective figure. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/339255
 
Description Biohybrids for Solar Fuels: Whole-cell Photocatalysis by Non-photosynthetic Organisms_Leeds (BB/S000704) 
Organisation University of Leeds
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution My team provides carbon dot light absorbers for the photocatalysis studies and access to equipment.
Collaborator Contribution Lars Jeuken (Leeds) is co-PI on the project and supports the project with liposomes and photocatalytic studies.
Impact Work in progress with several papers in preparation.
Start Year 2019