E. coli used to produce hydrogen
COLLEGE STATION, Texas, Jan 30, 2008 -- UPI
A U.S. chemical engineer has "tweaked" a strain of E. coli so it produces
about 140 times more hydrogen than is produced in naturally occurring
processes.
Texas A&M University Professor Thomas Wood said he envisioned the bacteria
that are usually associated with food poisoning as a potential source of
energy, helping power vehicles and homes.
Currently, most hydrogen is produced by a process known as "cracking water,"
through which hydrogen is separated from the oxygen. But the process is
expensive and requires great amounts of energy. Wood said his work with E.
coli might change that.
By selectively deleting six specific genes in E. coli's DNA, Wood enhanced
the bacterium's naturally occurring glucose-conversion process on a massive
scale.
"These bacteria have 5,000 genes that enable them to survive environmental
changes," Wood said. "When we knock things out, the bacteria become less
competitive. We haven't given them an ability to do something. They don't
gain anything here; they lose. The bacteria that we're making are less
competitive and less harmful because of what's been removed."
The study is reported in the journal Microbial Biotechnology.
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