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+ | <title>Description</title> | ||
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+ | background: url("https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/8/8b/T--British_Columbia--header-lake.jpg"); | ||
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+ | </style> | ||
+ | </head> | ||
+ | <body> | ||
+ | <div class="cover"> | ||
+ | <div class="container-fluid"> | ||
+ | <div class="row" id="title"> | ||
+ | <div class="col-sm-12"> | ||
+ | <strong><p style="font-size: 4em">Overview</p></strong> | ||
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− | < | + | <div id="breadcrumbs"> |
− | < | + | <strong> |
− | < | + | <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:British_Columbia">Home</a> / |
− | < | + | <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:British_Columbia/Description">Project - Description</a></strong> |
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+ | <h1>Cresentium</h1> | ||
+ | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/9/95/T--British_Columbia--Outline.png" | ||
+ | align="left"; width="500px"; style="padding-right:10px; margin-bottom: 25px; max-width: 100%"><p align="justify"> Pulp and paper mills around British Columbia (BC)’s northern heartland were once at the forefront of the small town economy. Their main function was the production of paper and thick fiber board from organic compounds such as vegetable or wood fibers (raw biomass). However, in recent years the pulp and paper industry has struggled due to the global shift from newsprint to digital applications. In North America, the demand for pulp and paper products is down at least 75% from its peak era in the 1990’s. The Pulp and Paper Products Council has reported that demand has fallen close to 10% each year and the decrease continues to accelerate. As such, a large portion of the paper mills in BC have closed down or significantly reduced their workforce, impacting the local economic output and forcing people from their homes in search of other forms of employment. The 2016 UBC iGEM team saw a need to re-purpose the paper mill industry in BC. With BC already having significant infrastructure for biomass processing in the form of empty mills, we aimed to develop a process that utilizes raw plant materials.</p> | ||
− | < | + | <p align="justify"> Petroleum-derived chemicals are used as building blocks to create a variety of products we take for granted in our day to day lives. While these molecules have proven to be critical to modern society, their overuse has had significant negative environmental impacts. As we push forward into a more responsible future, we must pivot towards sustainable solutions able to supersede petroleum-derived products with renewable alternatives. |
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− | <p> | + | <p align="justify"> One successfully implemented solution has been to use microbial biocatalysts to transform renewable biomass, from agricultural and forestry wastes, into bio-equivalent chemicals able to be directly used in established industrial processes. Companies, such as BioAmber and Genomatica, have championed this approach to create important molecular building blocks, including succinic acid and 1,4-butanediol, for synthesizing high value chemicals. While these early successes have highlighted the potential of these systems, renewable biomass as a whole remains under-utilized. The major roadblock to implementing successful industrial-scale bio-processes is the high cost of processing raw biomass into a usable form. Comprising greater than 50% of total production costs, as estimated by the National Renewable Energy Lab, biomass processing creates a significant barrier that prevents all but the most mature technologies from utilizing renewable feedstocks. |
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</p> | </p> | ||
− | </ | + | <p align="justify"> This year, our team aimed to bring the processing of biomass back to BC mills by making renewable biomass feed stock utilization cheaper and more efficient. Taking lessons from nature, we pursued a bio-mimicry approach to build a microbial community able to effectively transform biomass into useful products. To accomplish this task, we split our microbial community into two halves. One half is responsible for transforming the biomass into usable growth substrates, while the other half focuses on using these growth substrates for the production of useful products. Our community demonstrates a unique method for surface display of functional enzymes, while also being a proof of concept for the direct conversion of raw biomass into usable products.</p> |
+ | </div><!--.content-wrap--> | ||
+ | </body> | ||
− | <div class=" | + | <p id="read-more"><strong>Check out other parts of our project below!</strong></p> |
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− | < | + | <div class="col-sm-6" id="previous"> |
− | + | <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:British_Columbia/Project/S-Layer/Cellulases"> | |
+ | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/6/60/T--British_Columbia--header-mountains.jpg"></a> | ||
+ | <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:British_Columbia/Project/S-Layer/Cellulases"> | ||
+ | <strong><figcaption>Cellulases</figcaption></strong></a> | ||
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− | + | <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:British_Columbia/Project/S-Layer/Laccases"> | |
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− | + | <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:British_Columbia/Project/S-Layer/Laccases"> | |
− | + | <strong><figcaption>Laccases</figcaption></strong></a></div> | |
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Revision as of 14:42, 18 October 2016
Overview
Cresentium
Pulp and paper mills around British Columbia (BC)’s northern heartland were once at the forefront of the small town economy. Their main function was the production of paper and thick fiber board from organic compounds such as vegetable or wood fibers (raw biomass). However, in recent years the pulp and paper industry has struggled due to the global shift from newsprint to digital applications. In North America, the demand for pulp and paper products is down at least 75% from its peak era in the 1990’s. The Pulp and Paper Products Council has reported that demand has fallen close to 10% each year and the decrease continues to accelerate. As such, a large portion of the paper mills in BC have closed down or significantly reduced their workforce, impacting the local economic output and forcing people from their homes in search of other forms of employment. The 2016 UBC iGEM team saw a need to re-purpose the paper mill industry in BC. With BC already having significant infrastructure for biomass processing in the form of empty mills, we aimed to develop a process that utilizes raw plant materials.
Petroleum-derived chemicals are used as building blocks to create a variety of products we take for granted in our day to day lives. While these molecules have proven to be critical to modern society, their overuse has had significant negative environmental impacts. As we push forward into a more responsible future, we must pivot towards sustainable solutions able to supersede petroleum-derived products with renewable alternatives.
One successfully implemented solution has been to use microbial biocatalysts to transform renewable biomass, from agricultural and forestry wastes, into bio-equivalent chemicals able to be directly used in established industrial processes. Companies, such as BioAmber and Genomatica, have championed this approach to create important molecular building blocks, including succinic acid and 1,4-butanediol, for synthesizing high value chemicals. While these early successes have highlighted the potential of these systems, renewable biomass as a whole remains under-utilized. The major roadblock to implementing successful industrial-scale bio-processes is the high cost of processing raw biomass into a usable form. Comprising greater than 50% of total production costs, as estimated by the National Renewable Energy Lab, biomass processing creates a significant barrier that prevents all but the most mature technologies from utilizing renewable feedstocks.
This year, our team aimed to bring the processing of biomass back to BC mills by making renewable biomass feed stock utilization cheaper and more efficient. Taking lessons from nature, we pursued a bio-mimicry approach to build a microbial community able to effectively transform biomass into useful products. To accomplish this task, we split our microbial community into two halves. One half is responsible for transforming the biomass into usable growth substrates, while the other half focuses on using these growth substrates for the production of useful products. Our community demonstrates a unique method for surface display of functional enzymes, while also being a proof of concept for the direct conversion of raw biomass into usable products.
Check out other parts of our project below!