Tübingen Biotechnology Team Converts Simple Ingredients into Folic Acid Using Microbes
Take carbon dioxide, hydrogen and oxygen as well as electricity from renewable sources – that’s all a bacterium and baker’s yeast need to produce proteins for human nutrition and the vital vitamin B9 in a sophisticated bioreactor system in the laboratory. This result was achieved by a research team led by Professor Lars Angenent from the environmental biotechnology department at the University of Tübingen during the further development of its power-to-protein system. The new protein product with vitamin B9, folic acid, can serve as a vegan basis for meat substitutes, which could be used to feed a growing world population in a climate-friendly way in the long term. The study was published in the journal Trends in Biotechnology.
Although many microbes make a rather unspectacular visual impression, they can produce a huge variety of substances, which humans take advantage of in the production of beer, wine and cheese, for example. “We had previously developed a power-to-protein technology: This involves using two different microbes one after the other: a Clostridium bacterium reduced carbon dioxide with hydrogen in the absence of air to form acetate, which the baker’s yeast, a fungus, then converted into proteins in the presence of air,” explains Angenent. This first system only worked, however, if the microbes were provided with certain vitamins such as B9. “Humans cannot survive on protein alone,” says Angenent. “That’s why we wanted to produce vitamin B9.” The aim is not to feed more vitamins into the process than can be obtained.