Juan Esteban Ramírez Morales
I was born and grew up in Medellín, an important city in Colombia. Since I was a child I have been inclined for nature, and due to my specific interests for living beings and technology, I studied biological engineering. Shortly after finishing my bachelor, I went abroad to study my master in Chile, where I learnt more about bioprocessing and environmental technology. At the same time I have been getting professional experience in different international and recognized research groups, I have been also enjoying my free time travelling and knowing new cultures.
My research project is about to produce valuable biochemicals (e.g. polyhydroxyalkanoate, free carboxylates and muconic acid) using cultures of Pseudomonas sp. growing on aromatic waste streams in the anodic chamber of an electrochemical bioreactor. This project is intended to establish a novel bioelectrochemical production platform in the industrial biotechnological field. Wastewater streams coming from biomass fractionation processes are used as subtrate. Specifically, we will use waste streams generated during lignin depolymerization processes. These streams are considered diffciult to degrade as they contains a complex variety of aromatic compounds. Nevertheless, they can be catabolized and transformed into valuable products by some strains of Pseudomonas sp. In this way, it could be possible to contribute to the lignin valorization and stablish a more sutainable biotechnological process.
Status PhD
- PhD successfully defended
- Supervisors / promoters: Lars Blank, Miriam Agler-Rosenbaum (RWTH Aachen), Korneel Rabaey (UGent)
- Place and date of PhD defense: Aachen, Oct 26, 2021
- PhD degree awarding institutions: RWTH Aachen, Ghent University
Publications arising from the PhD
- Juan E. Ramírez-Morales, Phillip Czichowski, Volkan Besirlioglu, Lars Regestein, Korneel Rabaey, Lars M. Blank, and Miriam A. Rosenbaum* Lignin Aromatics to PHA Polymers: Nitrogen and Oxygen Are the Key Factors for Pseudomonas, ACS Sustainable Chem. Eng. 2021, 9, 31, 10579–10590 https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c02682
Link to PhD thesis
https://publications.rwth-aachen.de/record/836318
Short abstract/summary
Lignin, a major component of lignocellulosic biomass, is the most abundant aromatic polymer on the planet. Thus, it represents a renewable and non-fossil source of aromatics, promising to positively impact the transition to a circular bioeconomy. Despite being a chemical treasure box, lignin is still widely underutilized. In the last years, there is an emerging paradigm change towards implementing new biorefineries based on chemo- and/or biocatalytic upgrading of lignin aromatics into valuable products. Especially, in the biocatalytic conversion, the native aromatic catabolic ability of many Pseudomomas promises to ease the inherent aromatic heterogeneity of lignin depolymerized mixtures. Simultaneously, some Pseudomomas strains can synthesize valuable molecules for the polymer industry like medium chain length polyhydroxyalkanoate (mcl-PHA) and cis,cis-muconic acid. While enormous progress is underway in metabolic engineering towards improving conversion of aromatics into mcl-PHA, there is a significant gap in detailed bioprocess understanding, especially from mixtures of lignin-derived aromatics. Analogously, despite important advances on strain engineering and bioprocess development, limitations related to product accumulation at toxic levels still prevents reaching industrially-relevant productivities of cis,cis-muconic acid from lignin substrates. Thus, through understanding the key factors for successful bioconversion and applying this knowledge to implement innovative bioprocess strategies, this thesis intended to increase production of mcl-PHA and cis,cis-muconic acid from lignin aromatics. After performing step-wise screenings and parallel cultivations of several known strains of the Pseudomonas family, this work clearly confirmed Pseudomonas putida KT24440 as the most robust, versatile, and well performing biocatalyst for mcl-PHA accumulation from a defined lignin aromatic mixture. In a next step, the detailed resolution of aromatics funneling and microbial metabolic activity was revealed during online measurements of the oxygen consumption. From this experience, oxygen and nitrogen availability were identified as the key factors for a successful biocatalytic upgrading. Overall, the accumulation of mcl-PHA was improved in the wild type strain under technically relevant conditions by up to 43% (polymer content in cell biomass, mg mcl-PHA mg-1 CDW). At this stage, the highest mcl-PHA concentration (582 mg L-1) was obtained for a C/N ratio of 60 for oxygen-unlimited conditions (oxygen transfer rate ≥ 20 mmol L-1 h-1). In contrast, aromatic intermediates accumulated under oxygen-limited conditions at oxygen transfer rates below 10 mmol L-1 h-1. Through this bioprocess characterization, the performance of the biocatalytic funneling in P. putida KT2440 became predictable and thus, the experimental conditions were scalable into a 1-L stirred tank bioreactor based on the oxygen transfer rate. Finally, the benefits of implementing simultaneous biocatalyst and bioprocess optimization strategies were demonstrated. A 1.9-fold increment in mcl-PHA concentration and a 1.5-fold increment in mcl-PHA content were obtained from lignin aromatics. To alleviate the negative effect of product accumulation at toxic levels, this thesis also implemented an innovative solution establishing an in-line extraction of cis,cis-muconate produced by a metabolically engineered strain of P. putida KT2240. The implementation followed a systematic approach of process development. First, an electrolytic extraction of cis,cis-muconate was characterized in terms of flux and Coulombic efficiency from a synthetic media. In parallel, cis,cis-muconic acid bioproduction rates were defined in a conventional process and the negative effect of cis,cis muconic acid on the culture was confirmed at a threshold concentration of 195 mM (27.7 g L-1). In the middle time, long term electrolytic extractions were performed at a higher scale using fermentation broths as approximation of the final process. This experience served to identify and solve relevant technical drawbacks related to muconic acid precipitation in the anodic chamber. The solution consisted of pH control at 3.5, which was a suitable pH where higher amounts of the muconate isomeric forms cis,cis- and cis,trans- were found in solution (i.e., not as precipitated form). This was essential to enable higher muconate accumulation in the anolyte. From all the process parameters (i.e., bioproduction rates and extractive electrolytic performance) obtained separately, a final integration was carried out. Through implementing the in-line extraction from a bioreactor, the volumetric productivity of cis,cis-muconate was increased 15.6 % in respect to a conventional bioprocess run in parallel. Overall, this study contributed to deepening our understanding of the biocatalytic capability of the promising bacterium P. putida KT2440 towards efficient conversions of lignin aromatics for future biorefinery applications. Additionally, the potential of selective removal of cis,cis-muconic acid was demonstrated for the first time in a microbial cultivation, contributing as an important step towards implementing a cost-effective bioproduction system.