Diesel From Fungus? Could This Rock The Oil Industry?

Deep in the jungles of Patagonia of Montana St University has found a which produces a type of which could hold great promise for the world of fuel devlopement. By synthesizing plant material to the later stage product it essentially skips the chemical intenisves stages of production. It could be a fascinating find for the world.

A team led by a Montana State University professor has found a that produces a new type of diesel fuel, which they say holds great promise.

Calling the ’ output “myco-diesel,” and his collaborators describe their initial observations in the November issue of Microbiology, which carries a photo of the fungus on its cover.

The discovery may offer an alternative to fossil fuels, said Strobel, MSU professor of plant sciences and plant pathology. The find is even bigger, he said, than his 1993 discovery of fungus that contained the anticancer drug taxol.

“The broader question is, what is responsible for the production of these compounds,” Scott Strobel said. “If you can identify that, you can hopefully scale it up so you end up with better efficiency of production.”

Scott Strobel said he agrees with his father that the discovery is exciting.

There’s nothing in the scientific literature about a microbe that produces the diversity of medium-chain hydrocarbons found in the Gliocladium roseum, he said. Longer hydrocarbon chains are common, but “that’s not what you put in your gas tank or jet engine.”

Another promising aspect is that the fungus can grow in cellulose.

“That’s the most common organic molecule on earth,” Scott Strobel said. “It’s all around us, everywhere.”

Scientists in a variety of disciplines should be able to work together to optimize production and find a way to turn what is essentially a vapor into a burnable, liquid fuel, he added.

fungus fungus under scope

Top left: Colorized environmental scanning electron microscope photo of Gliocladium roseum, an endophtic fungus that produces myco-diesel hydrocarbons.
Top right: Culture plate of Gliocladium roseum, an endophtic fungus that produces myco-diesel hydrocarbons.

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