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Chementator Briefs

| By Gerald Ondrey

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Bio-based fumarate

With the bacterium Basfia succiniciproducens, BASF SE (Ludwigshafen, Germany; www.basf.com) intends to transform sugar and carbon dioxide into fumaric acid, an important intermediate for chemical production. To this end, the company is collaborating with Saarland University, University of Marburg and the University of Kaiserslautern-Landau in a joint research project entitled FUMBIO (FUMarsäure BIObasiert).

The bacterium, which was isolated in 2008 from the rumen of a Holstein cow, will be genetically modified by researchers so that it produces large quantities of bio-based fumaric acid (fumarate) during fermentation. With this intermediate, BASF can make a wide range of products with a low carbon footprint, including additives for food and animal feed, starting materials for medication, or building blocks for polymers and detergents and formulators. The research project also focuses on the subsequent refinement of fumarate by enzymes into biodegradable industrial products.

The FUMBIO project received €2.6 million in financial support from Germany’s Federal Ministry for Education and Research.

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