January 8, 2024

 

Coal-based methanol may provide answer to China's animal feed demand

 

 

 

Researchers in China have developed a method to create protein using methanol derived from coal that is both inexpensive and highly efficient.

 

It is the first time the production of protein from coal has been economically feasible.

 

With a rising global population, the demand for food is also constantly growing, which has led to a surging demand for protein to use in animal feed.

 

China depends heavily on imported soybeans for animal feed, with an annual import volume of about 100 million tonnes and a dependency rate exceeding 80%.

 

Developing fast, efficient methods of producing high-quality proteins is therefore very important. The most promising solution lies in biotechnology synthesis.

 

There are several routes for biological protein synthesis. The simplest involves converting by-products from the food and agricultural industries, such as corn steep liquor, distillers grains and straw, into higher-value protein products through microbial transformation. However, these by-products often already have established uses, and their variable supply and quality make industrial production challenging.

 

This is what scientists from the Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), led by Professor Wu Xin, have been working on.

 

"Coal, with a global reserve of about 1.07 trillion tonnes, can be converted into methanol through coal gasification," Wu wrote in a paper published in the journal China Science Bulletin. "Methanol mixes well with water, offering high efficiency in fermentation processes compared to gaseous substrates and eliminating the need for specialised fermentation equipment."

 

His team has developed a protein production technology that is cheaper than traditional protein biosynthesis.

 

The yeast strain Pichia pastoris (P. pastoris), used in this process, grows by using methanol. But, as methanol is toxic and has complex pathways, about 20% of it is wasted. It turns into carbon dioxide and water instead of being used for protein synthesis, which reduces the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the process.

 

"Research on synthesising cellular protein from methanol began in the 1980s, focusing mainly on strain selection and production process optimisation," Wu said in the paper. "Yet, due to high costs, methanol-synthesised protein products could not compete with soy protein and have not been produced on a large scale."

 

To solve the problem, his team collected over 20,000 yeast samples from vineyards, forests and marshlands across China. From those samples, they identified strains capable of efficiently using various sugars and alcohols as carbon sources.

 

By removing specific genes in a wild-type Pichia pastoris strain, they engineered a yeast with significantly enhanced methanol tolerance and metabolic efficiency. This engineering dramatically boosted the targeted conversion of methanol to protein.

 

"The researchers achieved a dry cell weight and crude protein content of 120g/litre and 67.2 per cent with their modified P. pastoris. And the methanol-to-protein conversion efficiency reached 92% of the theoretical value," a report on the CAS website said.

 

The high conversion rate makes this protein production method very attractive economically.

 

"It doesn't require arable land, is unaffected by seasons and climate, and is a thousand times more efficient than traditional agricultural practices," Wu added.

"Moreover, the protein content in the micro-organisms ranges from 40 to 85 percent, significantly higher than in natural plants."

 

These organisms also contain a complete amino acid profile, vitamins, inorganic salts, fats and carbohydrates, allowing them to partially replace fishmeal, soybeans, meat and skimmed milk powder in various applications.

 

The research team has already initiated industrial-scale demonstrations, producing thousands of tonnes of this protein in a plant. The specific partner was not disclosed.

 

Microbial proteins are nutritionally rich and lack allergens found in soy protein, making them excellent protein sources. However, there are currently only a few products on the market.

 

Wu said it is crucial that the physiological functions and nutritional value of methanol protein is enhanced and the market for functional proteins derived from it is expanded.

 

"That could further reduce production costs and increase the value of methanol protein, promoting its large-scale production," Wu said in a Science and Technology Daily report.

 

- South China Morning Post

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