Lynd LR, Wyman CE, Gerngross TU
Chemical & Biochemical Engineering, Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755.
Biotechnol Prog. 1999 Oct 1;15(5):777-793. doi: 10.1021/bp990109e.
The application of biotechnology to the production of commodity products (fuels, chemicals, and materials) offering benefits in terms of sustainable resource supply and environmental quality is an emergent area of intellectual endeavor and industrial practice with great promise. Such "biocommodity engineering" is distinct from biotechnology motivated by health care at multiple levels, including economic driving forces, the importance of feedstocks and cost-motivated process engineering, and the scale of application. Plant biomass represents both the dominant foreseeable source of feedstocks for biotechnological processes as well as the only foreseeable sustainable source of organic fuels, chemicals, and materials. A variety of forms of biomass, notably many cellulosic feedstocks, are potentially available at a large scale and are cost-competitive with low-cost petroleum whether considered on a mass or energy basis, and in terms of price defined on a purchase or net basis for both current and projected mature technology, and on a transfer basis for mature technology. Thus the central, and we believe surmountable, impediment to more widespread application of biocommodity engineering is the general absence of low-cost processing technology. Technological and research challenges associated with converting plant biomass into commodity products are considered relative to overcoming the recalcitrance of cellulosic biomass (converting cellulosic biomass into reactive intermediates) and product diversification (converting reactive intermediates into useful products). Advances are needed in pretreatment technology to make cellulosic materials accessible to enzymatic hydrolysis, with increased attention to the fundamental chemistry operative in pretreatment processes likely to accelerate progress. Important biotechnological challenges related to the utilization of cellulosic biomass include developing cellulase enzymes and microorganisms to produce them, fermentation of xylose and other nonglucose sugars, and "consolidated bioprocessing" in which cellulase production, cellulose hydrolysis, and fermentation of soluble carbohydrates to desired products occur in a single process step. With respect to product diversification, a distinction is made between replacement of a fossil resource-derived chemical with a biomass-derived chemical of identical composition and substitution of a biomass-derived chemical with equivalent functional characteristics but distinct composition. The substitution strategy involves larger transition issues but is seen as more promising in the long term. Metabolic engineering pursuant to the production of biocommodity products requires host organisms with properties such as the ability to use low-cost substrates, high product yield, competitive fitness, and robustness in industrial environments. In many cases, it is likely to be more successful to engineer a desired pathway into an organism having useful industrial properties rather than trying to engineer such often multi-gene properties into host organisms that do not have them naturally. Identification of host organisms with useful industrial properties and development of genetic systems for these organisms is a research challenge distinctive to biocommodity engineering. Chemical catalysis and separations technologies have important roles to play in downstream processing of biocommodity products and involve a distinctive set of challenges relative to petrochemical processing. At its current nascent state of development, the definition and advancement of the biocommodity field can benefit from integration at multiple levels. These include technical issues associated with integrating unit operations with each other, integrating production of individual products into a multi-product biorefinery, and integrating biorefineries into the broader resource, economic, and environmental systems in which they function. We anticipate that coproduction of multiple products, for example, production of fuels, chemicals, power, and/or feed, is likely to be essential for economic viability. Lifecycle analysis is necessary to verify the sustainability and environmental quality benefits of a particular biocommodity product or process. We see biocommodity engineering as a legitimate focus for graduate study, which is responsive to an established personnel demand in an industry that is expected to grow in the future. Graduate study in biocommodity engineering is supported by a distinctive blend of intellectual elements, including biotechnology, process engineering, and resource and environmental systems.
将生物技术应用于生产商品产品(燃料、化学品和材料),在可持续资源供应和环境质量方面带来益处,这是一个新兴的知识探索和工业实践领域,前景广阔。这种“生物商品工程”在多个层面上有别于以医疗保健为驱动的生物技术,包括经济驱动力、原料的重要性以及成本驱动的过程工程,还有应用规模。植物生物质既是生物技术过程中主要的可预见原料来源,也是唯一可预见的有机燃料、化学品和材料的可持续来源。多种形式的生物质,特别是许多纤维素原料,有可能大规模获取,并且无论是从质量还是能量角度,以及从当前和预计成熟技术的采购或净值定义价格,以及成熟技术的转让价格来看,都与低成本石油具有成本竞争力。因此,生物商品工程更广泛应用的核心障碍,且我们认为是可以克服的障碍,是普遍缺乏低成本加工技术。与将植物生物质转化为商品产品相关的技术和研究挑战,是相对于克服纤维素生物质的难降解性(将纤维素生物质转化为反应性中间体)和产品多样化(将反应性中间体转化为有用产品)来考虑的。预处理技术需要取得进展,以使纤维素材料能够进行酶水解,更加关注预处理过程中起作用的基础化学可能会加速进展。与纤维素生物质利用相关的重要生物技术挑战包括开发纤维素酶和生产这些酶的微生物、木糖和其他非葡萄糖糖的发酵,以及“整合生物加工”,即在单一工艺步骤中进行纤维素酶生产、纤维素水解以及将可溶性碳水化合物发酵为所需产品。关于产品多样化,在以生物质衍生的具有相同组成的化学品替代化石资源衍生的化学品,与用具有等效功能特性但组成不同的生物质衍生化学品进行替代之间存在区别。替代策略涉及更大的转型问题,但从长远来看更具前景。为生产生物商品产品而进行的代谢工程需要具有诸如能够使用低成本底物、高产品产量、具有竞争力的适应性以及在工业环境中具有稳健性等特性的宿主生物体。在许多情况下,将所需途径设计到具有有用工业特性的生物体中可能比试图将这种通常是多基因的特性设计到天然不具有这些特性的宿主生物体中更成功。识别具有有用工业特性的宿主生物体并为这些生物体开发遗传系统是生物商品工程特有的研究挑战。化学催化和分离技术在生物商品产品的下游加工中发挥着重要作用,并且相对于石化加工涉及一系列独特的挑战。在其当前发展的初始阶段,生物商品领域的定义和推进可以从多个层面的整合中受益。这些层面包括与将单元操作相互整合、将单个产品的生产整合到多产品生物精炼厂以及将生物精炼厂整合到它们所运作的更广泛的资源、经济和环境系统相关的技术问题。我们预计,例如生产燃料、化学品、电力和/或饲料等多种产品的联产对于经济可行性可能至关重要。生命周期分析对于验证特定生物商品产品或过程的可持续性和环境质量益处是必要的。我们将生物商品工程视为研究生学习的一个合理重点,它回应了一个预计未来会增长的行业中既定的人员需求。生物商品工程的研究生学习得到了包括生物技术、过程工程以及资源和环境系统等独特知识元素组合的支持。