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Engineering cyanobacteria for high-value flavours and fragrances production (2020-2024)

Abstract

Engineering the metabolism of cyanobacteria for industrial production of flavours and fragrances has great commercial potential. Cyanobacteria capture more than 25% of the planet's carbon. Due to their native metabolism and capacity to express complex plant proteins, they represent an attractive Synthetic Biology platform for the biosynthesis of flavours and fragrances. Combining physiological strain characterisation and `omics studies, new Synthetic Biology strategies and models will be developed. The project aims at engineering a suite of modified freshwater and marine cyanobacteria for flavours and fragrances biosynthesis. The project aims at enabling solar biomanufacturing to underpin the emergence of an advanced Australian bioeconomy.

Experts

Professor Esteban Marcellin

Professor
School of Chemical Engineering
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Professorial Research Fellow
Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology
Esteban Marcellin
Esteban Marcellin