Atmospheric Methane Research problem statements are shared to build community and knowledge around key challenges to accelerate progress.
Submit a problem statementView all problem statementsPaul Reginato, Lisa Stein, Mary Lidstrom, Jeremy Semrau, Jessica Swanson, Wenyu Gu, Noah Helman, James Weltz, Mark Hansen, Paige Brocidiacono, Ariana Caiati, Erin Wilson
This problem statement is also hosted on Homeworld's problem statement repository here.
This problem statement was created as part of a collaborative effort between Homeworld Collective and Spark Climate Solutions to identify and share priority problems at the intersection of biotech and atmospheric methane removal.
CH4 emissions have contributed ~30% of global warming to date (IEA, 2022), and natural sources may increase via feedback to warming (Zhang, 2023). Technologies for oxidizing atmospheric CH4, area CH4 emissions, and unavoidable point sources could substantially mitigate climate change. While CH4 above ~44,000 ppm can be flared, ~75% of CH4 pollution is atmospheric (2 ppm) or area emissions below 1000 ppm that are too dilute to be oxidized at scale using existing technologies (Abernathy, 2023).
Methane monooxygenase (MMO) enzymes, found in methanotrophic bacteria, naturally catalyze oxidation of CH4to methanol in a one-step reaction at ambient conditions (Tucci, 2024). Oxidation of dilute CH4 at scale may be possible in engineered systems using methanotrophs or cell-free MMO, for example via flow-through reactors (Lidstrom, 2023; Yoon, 2009), or expression in plants (Spatola, 2023). Enhancing oxidation rate at low (2-1000 ppm) CH4 concentrations is necessary to achieve feasible cost and scalability for these applications. For example, estimates indicate efficiency improvements must enable up to 10-fold cost reduction for oxidation of 500 ppm CH4 to reach $100/t CO2e in a reactor (Yoon, 2009).
Engineering MMO or screening many natural variants may provide a path to efficient CH4 oxidation. Of the two MMO families, soluble MMO (sMMO), a three-part enzymatic system, is a stronger candidate for engineering, since it faces fewer challenges to study, handling and heterologous expression compared to particulate MMO (pMMO) (Tucci, 2024; Reginato, 2024). However, sMMO engineering thus far has focused on manufacturing applications with high methane concentrations (Bennett, 2021; Clarke, 2021; Clarke, 2018; Clarke, 2022). sMMO activity should be engineered using high-throughput methods in an expression platform where the enzyme can fold well (Bennett, 2021; Clarke, 2021).
Specific affinity (a˚S), defined as Vmax/kM, is a metric for enzyme activity at very low substrate concentration that should be maximized (Lidstrom, 2023). pMMO has been favored over sMMO in proposed technologies owing to a lower apparent kM (Lidstrom, 2023; Yoon, 2009); however, few sMMO variants have been characterized (Banerjee; 2019), and other natural or engineered variants might achieve lower kM and/or higher a˚S. In heterologous expression or cell-free deployment, suppressing non-specific oxidation of methanol to toxic formaldehyde will also be crucial (Colby, 1977; Noah Helman, unpublished).
While design constraints for an application scenario are needed to establish clear performance targets for sMMO engineering, work should begin now to engineer sMMO. Goals are higher a˚S of the MMOH hydroxylase component of sMMO, as well as suppression of non-specific oxidation of methanol to toxic formaldehyde. A kM < 50 nM would be comparable to the lowest whole-cell kM value measured for a methanotroph (Schmider, 2024). This work should involve screening of natural sMMO variants from uncultured microbes derived from metagenomic sequence data, in addition to protein engineering.
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Biological CH4 oxidation technologies could also substantially improve the sustainability of methanol production and economically drive mitigation of point-source CH4 emissions through methanol manufacturing (Haynes, 2014; Shivananda, 2016). A high-specificity methane-to-methanol oxidation catalyst that operates at ambient temperatures could: 1) obviate high temperatures and pressures (200-300 ˚C, 50-100 atm) of the current industrial process, thereby reducing process emissions by up to ~0.25 Gt CO2/yr (Irena, 2021) enable one-step manufacturing process that has lower CapEx than the current two-step process, thereby enabling economical use of dilute or low-flux CH4 sources that are currently leaked to the atmosphere (Haynes, 2014). Engineering sMMO is also relevant to production of methanol and other chemicals.
Submitted by
Paul Reginato, Calvin Henard, Lisa Stein, Mary Lidstrom, Jeremy Semrau, Jessica Swanson, Wenyu Gu, James Weltz, Mark Hansen, Paige Brocidiacono, Ariana Caiati, Erin Wilson
Submitted by
Paul Reginato, Lisa Stein, Mary Lidstrom, Jeremy Semrau, Jessica Swanson, Wenyu Gu, Noah Helman, James Weltz, Mark Hansen, Paige Brocidiacono, Ariana Caiati, Erin Wilson
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