Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Engineering cyanobacterial carbonic anhydrase surface mutations for fast CO2 hydration and capture
View through CrossRef
Equilibration between CO2 and the other forms of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) is slow under ambient conditions, bottle-necked by the hydration of dissolved CO2 to form bicarbonate and a proton. This step is often rate-limiting for aqueous CO2 capture processes under ambient temperature and pressure, and is precisely the chemistry catalyzed by the family of carbonic anhydrase enzymes. As a result, incorporation of carbonic anhydrases (CAs) into various CO2 capture schemes may be used to accelerate CO2 hydration, increasing the rates of downstream processes coupled to this DIC equilibrium. While this potential use for CA has been long-studied, extending these basic chemical principles to real applications have been hampered by practical questions of how to economically source carbonic anhydrase enzymes at mass scale. This work explores the use of modified cyanobacterial expression hosts as a potential resolution to that problem. Specifically, engineering the surface display of carbonic anhydrases in fast-growing, marine cyanobacteria would yield a self-sustaining CO2 hydration catalyst that requires only sunlight, CO2 itself, and nutrients freely available in seawater, as inputs for passively generating carbonic anhydrases on the cell envelope during cell growth. These possibilities motivated the development of such constructs; their potential for enhancing CO2 hydration rates are reported here.
Title: Engineering cyanobacterial carbonic anhydrase surface mutations for fast CO2 hydration and capture
Description:
Equilibration between CO2 and the other forms of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) is slow under ambient conditions, bottle-necked by the hydration of dissolved CO2 to form bicarbonate and a proton.
This step is often rate-limiting for aqueous CO2 capture processes under ambient temperature and pressure, and is precisely the chemistry catalyzed by the family of carbonic anhydrase enzymes.
As a result, incorporation of carbonic anhydrases (CAs) into various CO2 capture schemes may be used to accelerate CO2 hydration, increasing the rates of downstream processes coupled to this DIC equilibrium.
While this potential use for CA has been long-studied, extending these basic chemical principles to real applications have been hampered by practical questions of how to economically source carbonic anhydrase enzymes at mass scale.
This work explores the use of modified cyanobacterial expression hosts as a potential resolution to that problem.
Specifically, engineering the surface display of carbonic anhydrases in fast-growing, marine cyanobacteria would yield a self-sustaining CO2 hydration catalyst that requires only sunlight, CO2 itself, and nutrients freely available in seawater, as inputs for passively generating carbonic anhydrases on the cell envelope during cell growth.
These possibilities motivated the development of such constructs; their potential for enhancing CO2 hydration rates are reported here.
Related Results
Carbonic anhydrase network of genes trigger cytosolic pH enabling differentiation from quiescence
Carbonic anhydrase network of genes trigger cytosolic pH enabling differentiation from quiescence
Abstract
Background
Carbonic anhydrase regulates various cellular processes. Intracellular pH flux impacted by carbonic anhydra...
Engineering cyanobacterial carbonic anhydrase surface mutations for fast CO2 hydration and capture
Engineering cyanobacterial carbonic anhydrase surface mutations for fast CO2 hydration and capture
Equilibration between CO2 and the other forms of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) is slow under ambient conditions, bottle-necked by the hydration of dissolved CO2 to form bicarbon...
Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation through CO2 sequestration via an engineered Bacillus subtilis
Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation through CO2 sequestration via an engineered Bacillus subtilis
Abstract
Background
Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation has been extensively researched for geoengineering applications as well as d...
Rapid Large-scale Trapping of CO2 via Dissolution in US Natural CO2 Reservoirs
Rapid Large-scale Trapping of CO2 via Dissolution in US Natural CO2 Reservoirs
Naturally occurring CO2 reservoirs across the USA are critical natural analogues of long-term CO2 storage in the subsurface over geological timescales and provide valuable insights...
Evaluation of Kaolinite and activated carbon performance for CO2 capture
Evaluation of Kaolinite and activated carbon performance for CO2 capture
Global climate change is one of the major threats facing the world today and can be due to increased atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases (GHGs), such as carbon dioxide (...
DEXAMETHASONE IMPLANT VERSUS TOPICAL CARBONIC ANHYDRASE INHIBITORS IN PATIENTS WITH BILATERAL RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA–RELATED CYSTOID MACULAR EDEMA
DEXAMETHASONE IMPLANT VERSUS TOPICAL CARBONIC ANHYDRASE INHIBITORS IN PATIENTS WITH BILATERAL RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA–RELATED CYSTOID MACULAR EDEMA
Purpose:
To compare within-subject efficacy and safety of intravitreal dexamethasone implant and topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitors in the treatment of retinitis pig...
Design And Operation Of The Levelland Unit CO2 Injection Facility
Design And Operation Of The Levelland Unit CO2 Injection Facility
Abstract
The Levelland CO2 Facility provides CO2 storageand handling capacity for the five CO2 injection pilots located in the Levelland Unit. Facilities pilots l...
Impact of CCUS Impurities on Dense Phase CO2 Pipeline Surface Engineering Design
Impact of CCUS Impurities on Dense Phase CO2 Pipeline Surface Engineering Design
Abstract
Numerous CO2 injection pipeline applications have been developed and implemented in the past decades in the UAE and all around the globe. Transporting the C...

