Advanced water splitting for green hydrogen gas production through complete oxidation of starch by in vitro metabolic engineering

Metab Eng. 2017 Nov:44:246-252. doi: 10.1016/j.ymben.2017.09.015. Epub 2017 Sep 30.

Abstract

Starch is a natural energy storage compound and is hypothesized to be a high-energy density chemical compound or solar fuel. In contrast to industrial hydrolysis of starch to glucose, an alternative ATP-free phosphorylation of starch was designed to generate cost-effective glucose 6-phosphate by using five thermophilic enzymes (i.e., isoamylase, alpha-glucan phosphorylase, 4-α-glucanotransferase, phosphoglucomutase, and polyphosphate glucokinase). This enzymatic phosphorolysis is energetically advantageous because the energy of α-1,4-glycosidic bonds among anhydroglucose units is conserved in the form of phosphorylated glucose. Furthermore, we demonstrated an in vitro 17-thermophilic enzyme pathway that can convert all glucose units of starch, regardless of branched and linear contents, with water to hydrogen at a theoretic yield (i.e., 12 H2 per glucose), three times of the theoretical yield from dark microbial fermentation. The use of a biomimetic electron transport chain enabled to achieve a maximum volumetric productivity of 90.2mmol of H2/L/h at 20g/L starch. The complete oxidation of starch to hydrogen by this in vitro synthetic (enzymatic) biosystem suggests that starch as a natural solar fuel becomes a high-density hydrogen storage compound with a gravimetric density of more than 14% H2-based mass and an electricity density of more than 3000Wh/kg of starch.

Keywords: Hydrogen production; Hydrogen storage; In vitro metabolic engineering; Starch phosphorylation; Thermophilic enzymes; Water splitting.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Archaeal Proteins / chemistry*
  • Bacterial Proteins / chemistry*
  • Hydrogen / chemistry*
  • Metabolic Engineering / methods*
  • Models, Chemical*
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Recombinant Proteins / chemistry
  • Starch / chemistry*
  • Water / chemistry*

Substances

  • Archaeal Proteins
  • Bacterial Proteins
  • Recombinant Proteins
  • Water
  • Hydrogen
  • Starch