Title: Polyhydroxyalkanoates:
1Polyhydroxyalkanoates Microbial Biopolymers
Peter Jantz Chemistry 496 May 7th, 2004
2Overview
- Traditional Polymers
- What are Biopolymers?
- How Biopolymers are Synthesized
- Environmental Benefits
- The Future of Biopolymers
3Traditional Polymers Structure
Polystyrene Coffee cups, Fast-food
Polyethylene HDPE Milk containers LDPE
Plastic bags, Packaging Polyvinyl chloride
Piping, Meat wrap Polyethylene terephthalate
Soda bottles
4Expenses of Traditional Polymers
- Production of 1 pound of polystyrene requires
2.26 pounds of oil. - 1 lb provides the carbon monomers and the
remaining 1.26 lbs of oil are burned to produce
the electrical power to run the reaction. - Organic solvent 1,2-dichloroethane (30 per
liter) - Reaction Initiator boron trifluoride with water
(20 per gram)
5Environmental effects
- Oil use 100 billion pounds of plastics are
produced in North America annually - Only 3 of these plastics are recycled
- Barely 25 of all soda bottles are recycled
6What are Biopolymers?
- Energy storage for bacteria
- Physical properties of polyethylene, polystyrene,
and synthetic polyesters - Polyhydroxyalkanoates
Polyhydroxybutyrate
Polyhydroxyvalerate
7Synthetic Conditions
- Anaerobic Environment
- Abundant carbon source
- 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA polymerization
8PHA Synthesis from fatty acids
9PHA Synthesis from a carbon source
103-hydroxyacyl CoA polymerization
11Processing
- A carbon source (corn) is ground into a mash and
fed to PHA-forming bacteria - Glucose is extracted as the microbes ferment the
mash and store the energy as PHAs - The cells are washed and lysed
- The PHAs are separated by centrifuge and washed
again
30 PHA by dry weight
12Biodegradability
13Monetary Costs
- 3x higher than petroleum-based plastics
- High start-up costs
- Labor intensive processing
- High energy demands
14Environmental effects
- Good
- Ocean pollution would decrease
- Landfill space would decrease (anaerob.)
- Recycling costs could be saved
- Bad
- Air pollution would increase significantly
- 2.39 pounds of fossil fuel are burned for each
pound of PHA produced
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15Is there a future for Biopolymers?
- With greater financial and environmental costs,
how will renewable biodegradable polymers take a
hold in industry and with consumers?
16Mustard!!
17Genetic transfer to plants
- Mustard and alfalfa
- Restriction Endonuclease gene insertion
- Use carbon-dioxide as carbon source
- 14 PHA by dry weight
- Cheaper processing
18References
1 T. Gerngross. Plastic from plants called
costly New Orleans ACS meeting. August 25,
1999 2 C. Nawrath et al. Targeting of the
polyhydroxybutyrate biosynthetic pathway to the
plastids of Arabidopsis thaliana results in high
levels of polymer accumulation. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 12760, 1994. 3 Yong Jia
et al. Mechanistic Studies on Class I
Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) Synthase from Ralstonia
eutropha Class I and III Synthases Share a
Similar Catalytic Mechanism. Biochemistry, 1011
-1019, 2001. 4 Shiming Zhang et al. Mechanism
of the Polymerization Reaction Initiated and
Catalyzed by the Polyhydroxybutyrate Synthase of
Ralstonia eutropha. Biomacromolecules, 504 -509,
2003. 5 Si Jae Park et al. Production of
Poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyhexanoate) by
Metabolically Engineered Escherichia coli
Strains. Biomacromolecules, 248 -254, 2001. 6
Lin Su et al. Enzymatic Polymerization of (R )-3-
Hydroxyalkanoates by Bacterial Polymerase.
Macromolecules, 229 -231, 2000.
19the End.