Bioengineered Bacteria Pump Out Fuel for Cars

Genetically Engineered Living Factory
A bioengineered version of the Ralstonia eutropha bacteria can create fuel to replace gasoline.
(Image credit: Christopher Brigham | MIT)

A humble soil bacteria has become a genetically engineered factory capable of making fuel for cars. But the project still has to get out of the lab and scale up to industrial-size production.

The MIT project aims to make transportation fuels 10 times more efficiently than existing biofuels derived from living organisms. Researchers swapped out the genes of the R. eutropha bacterium so that it can create isobutanol — an alcohol that can replace or blend with gasoline used by vehicles.

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