table of contentsinternational fuel ethanol workshop & expo . past awardees of the raphael...

76
1 SYMPOSIUM ON BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR FUELS AND CHEMICALS 2015 TABLE OF CONTENTS Sponsors 2 Welcome from the Organizing Committee 3 Organizers 4 Charles D Scott Award 5 Raphael Katzen Award 6 Bioeconomy Leadership Award 7 Banquet Speaker 8 General Information 9 Floor Plans 11 Exhibits 13 Technical Program 16 Monday Posters 30 Tuesday Posters 42 Author Index 54

Upload: others

Post on 25-May-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

1SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Table of ConTenTs

Sponsors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Welcome from the Organizing Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Organizers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Charles D . Scott Award . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

Raphael Katzen Award . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Bioeconomy Leadership Award . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Banquet Speaker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Floor Plans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Exhibits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Technical Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Monday Posters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

Tuesday Posters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Author Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

Page 2: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

2 SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

sponsors

applikon

Page 3: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

3

Welcome

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

WelComeWelcome to the Thirty-Seventh Symposium on Biotechnology for Fuels and Chemicals (37th SBFC), a special conference of the Society for Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology (SIMB) hosted by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) . We are excited for you to join us and our many sponsors in La Jolla for an exciting exchange of technical information, scientific ideas, and real-world experiences in the arena of biotechnology-enabled renewable resource conversion to fuels, chemicals, and products .

This year’s meeting highlights the latest research and development accomplishments and breakthroughs while providing ample opportunities for technical discussions and professional networking . The technical program includes three parallel tracks comprising eighteen oral presentations, two special topics, and two poster sessions . We appreciate and gratefully acknowledge the participation and support provided by the Tabletop Exhibitors and Program Sponsors . Many of the products and services advertised are specifically oriented to enhance and enable the bio-based economy and we encourage you to visit the exhibitors’ booths during the daily session programming breaks to learn more about the latest in research services and laboratory and processing equipment products .

A highlight of this annual symposium is presentation of the Charles D . Scott, Raphael Katzen, and Bioeconomy Leadership Awards to recognize those who have made especially significant technical, commercial, or institutional contributions to the field of biotechnology for fuels and chemicals .

Dr . Charles D . Scott founded the SBFC and chaired the meeting for its first ten years . The Charles D . Scott Award recognizes individuals who have made distinguished contributions to the science and understanding of biotechnology to produce fuels and chemicals from renewable resources . This year the Charles D . Scott Award is being presented to Peter Biely, Slovak Institute of Chemistry, Slovak Academy of Sciences .

Dr . Raphael Katzen was a pioneer in scaling up and commercializing technologies for converting renewable feedstocks into fuels and chemicals . The Raphael Katzen Award recognizes individuals who have made distinguished contributions to enabling, deploying, and commercializing biotechnology to produce fuels and chemicals from renewable resources . This year the Raphael Katzen Award is being presented to Phil Madson, KATZEN International .

The Bioeconomy Leadership Award recognizes a company or non-governmental organization that has significantly advanced development of the renewable resource-based fuels and chemicals economy . This award highlights sustained organizational leadership excellence in enabling and realizing an expanded bio-based economy . This year the Bioeconomy Leadership Award is being presented to Novozymes .

As always, the SBFC is made possible through the dedicated efforts of the SIMB staff, the SBFC’s organizing committee and it’s session chairs, and of course, the generous financial support of its sponsors . We urge you to join us in warmly and sincerely thanking the people and sponsors that make this annual Symposium possible . This year’s sponsors include:

Abengoa Bioenergy New Technology Advance Bio LLC Applikon BIO DuPont Idaho National Laboratory

Iogen Katzen International Novozymes US DOE Bioenergy Technologies Office Vogelbusch GmbH

Again, welcome to La Jolla and the 37th Symposium on Biotechnology for Fuels and Chemicals . We are eagerly looking forward to several days of high-spirited discussions on the science, engineering, and related analysis of bio-based fuels and chemicals technologies that are the hallmark of this Symposium .

steve Decker Jim mcmillan NREL NREL

Page 4: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

4

Organizers

sympOsium On BiOtechnOlOgy fOr fuels and chemicals 2015

organizersprogram ChairsJim McMillan National Renewable Energy Laboratory 15013 Denver West Parkway Golden, CO 80401

Steve Decker National Renewable Energy Laboratory 15013 Denver West Parkway Golden, CO 80401

program Co-ChairsSteve Brown Oak Ridge National Laboratory P .O . Box 2008 Oak Ridge, TN

Thomas Klasson USDA ARS SRRC 1100 Robert E . Lee Blvd . New Orleans, LA 70124

organizing CommiTTeeCathy Asleson NordYeast LLC

Doug Cameron Alberti Advisors , Minneapolis, MN

Rubens Maciel Filho State University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil

Bryna Guriel USDOE Bioenergy Technologies Office, Golden Field Office

Eung-Soo Kim Inha University

Suzanne Lantz DuPont Industrial Biosciences

Jonathan Mielenz White Cliffs Biosystems LLC

Quang Nguyen Abengoa Energy

Lisbeth Olsson Chalmers University

Tim Rials University of Tennessee

Jack Saddler University of British Columbia

Seema Singh Sandia National Laboratory/Joint BioEnergy Institute

Sarah Teter Novozymes

Jan Westpheling University of Georgia

Charles Wyman University of California-Riverside, CA

2015 simb offiCerspresidentTim Davies, Green Biologics, Abingdon, UK

past presidentLeonard Katz, SynBerc, UC-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA

president-electScott Baker, Pacific National Laboratory, Richland, WA

secretaryRobert Donofrio, NSF International, Lansing, MI

TreasurerJanet Westpheling, University of Georgia, Athens GA

simb DirectorsRamon Gonzalez, Rice University, Houston, TX

Jonathan Mielenz, White Cliff Biosystems LLC ., Rockwood, TN

Steve Van Dien, Genomatica, San Diego, CA

Debbie Yaver, Novozymes, Davis, CA

Page 5: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

5

AwArds

symposium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

aWarDees & speakersCharles D. sCoTT aWarDInitiated in 1995, the Charles D . Scott Award recognizes individuals who have made distinguished contributions to enable and further the use of biotechnology to produce fuels and chemicals . The award is named in honor of Dr . Charles D . Scott, who founded the Symposium on Biotechnology for Fuels and Chemicals and chaired the conference for its first 10 years . A member of the National Academy of Engineering and a past director of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Chuck performed research and development on many novel bioprocessing systems while at ORNL including high productivity bioreactors, immoblized microbes, enzymes in organic media, and coal bioprocessing .

2015 C.D. sCoTT aWarDeepeter biely

Dr . Peter Biely, DrSc . is a biochemist and research professor from the Institute of Chemistry, Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava, Slovakia . He graduated from the Comenius University in Bratislava in 1963, obtained a PhD degree from the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences (1968), served as postdoctoral fellow at the Harvard Medical School in Boston (1968-1968) and was awarded DrSc degree in 1990 . Dr . Biely is internationally well recognized based on his contribution to the area of microbial degradation of plant biomass . He published 215 papers and chapters, has several successful patents and 6200 citations . He was a principal investigator of many projects and supervised 10 postgraduate students . As one of the foremost and most cited researchers in his country, he received a number of national awards, e .g . Meritorious Inventor of Czechoslovakia 1989, Golden Medal of the Slovak Academy of Sciences 2001, Slovak Scientist of the Year 2003 and Order of Ludovit Stur from the President of the Slovak Republic 2011 . He was a recipient of fellowships from OECD, JSPS, USDA and many academic institutions from all over the world where he served as a Visiting Professor or a Lecturer at biotechnology courses .

past awardees of the Charles D. scott award

1995 17th Symposium Donald J . Johnson

1996 18th Symposium Bruce Dale

1997 19th Symposium Raphael Katzen

1998 20th Symposium Jack Saddler

1999 21st Symposium Charles E . Wyman

2000 22nd Symposium Karel Grohman

2001 23rd Symposium Patrick Foody

2002 24th Symposium Sharon Shoemaker

2003 25th Symposium Thomas W . Jeffries

2004 26th Symposium Guido Zacchi

2005 27th Symposium Lee Lynd

2006 28th Symposium Brian Davison

Mark Finkelstein

2007 29th Symposium Lonnie O . Ingram

2008 30th Symposium Barbel Hahn-Hagerdal

2009 31st Symposium Michael R . Ladisch

2010 32nd Symposium Michael E . Himmel

2011 33rd Symposium Stephen Picataggio

2012 34th Symposium Jens Nielsen

2013 35th Symposium Liisa Viikari

2014 36th Symposium Rodney Bothast

Page 6: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

6

AwArds

symposium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

raphael kaTzen aWarDInitiated in 2008, the Raphael Katzen Award recognizes individuals who have made distinguished contributions to enable and further the deployment and commercialization of biotechnology to produce fuels and chemicals from renewable resources . This award is named in honor of Dr . Raphael Katzen, who was a pioneer in scaling up and commercializing technologies for converting renewable feedstocks into fuels and chemicals . Dr . Katzen was involved in this topic since the 1940s when he first began working on converting wood waste to ethanol . He played a major role in development and improving corn dry milling technologies and in continuing to advance commercialization of lignocellulose conversion technologies .

2015 raphael kaTzen aWarDeephil madson, kaTzen international

Phil Madson has served as President of KATZEN International, Inc . since 1993 . He has held a number of technical and executive positions since joining the firm in 1980, including technology development, process engineering, project management, startup services and marketing . KATZEN’s focus throughout this period has been research and development, design and execution of advanced technology for the fuel, industrial and potable ethanol industries worldwide . Madson has concentrated his efforts on commercialization of value-added agriculture integrated with bio-based fuels and chemicals . He led the team that implemented Simultaneous Saccharification and Fermentation (SSF) at commercial scale during the 1980’s . Since Madson assumed the leadership responsibility, KATZEN International has completed 85 commercial projects in more than 30 countries .

Mr . Madson’s first 10 years of industrial experience included a range of technical and managerial responsibilities in the Paper Products division of the Procter & Gamble

Company . His responsibilities included production technology development and implementation, and new product/process development in cellulose and plastic systems . In addition to his technical accomplishments, Madson held the position of Associate Director, where he was responsible for process and product technology development and execution for cellulose–based products with retail sales exceeding $500,000,000 .

Phil received B .S . and M .S . degrees in Chemical Engineering from Iowa State University and is a registered Professional Engineer . He was honored by his peers with the “2009 Award of Excellence” for technical and development achievements as recognized by the International Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo .

past awardees of the raphael katzen award

2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen

2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron

2010 32nd Symposium no recipient selected

2011 33rd Symposium Patrick Foody, Sr .

2012 34th Symposium John Ferrell

2013 35th Symposium no recipient selected

2014 36th Symposium Jim Millis

Page 7: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

7

AwArds

symposium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

bioeConomy leaDership aWarDThe Symposium on Biotechnology for Fuels and Chemicals (SBFC) announced the creation of a new award in 2013 . The “Bioeconomy Leadership Award” is given on behalf of the SBFC community to a company or non-governmental organization that has significantly advanced the development of a renewable resource-based fuels and chemicals economy . This award is intended to recognize demonstrated and sustained leadership excellence in enabling and realizing commercialization of biomass conversion technologies for fuels and chemicals production . Unique among the SBFC awards, the Bioeconomy Leadership Award is presented to a company or non-governmental institution rather than to an individual . This award has been conceived to showcase organizational leadership in advancing development of the bio-based economy .

2015 bioeConomy leaDership aWarDeenovozymes

Novozymes is the world leader in bioinnovation . The company’s business is industrial enzymes, microorganisms, and biopharmaceutical ingredients . Novozymes helps companies make more from less by offering biological solutions that save energy and raw materials, and reduce waste . The result is higher quality products, lower costs, better lives and a better environment in a growing world . Novozymes’ products are used in the manufacturing process of 40 different industries including biofuels, detergents, food, and animal feed .

Novozymes has been at the forefront of delivering robust biochemical conversion technology to the advanced biofuels and renewable chemicals industry . Its enzyme products have significantly driven down costs and increased yields in the production of both conventional biofuels from starch and advanced biofuels from agricultural residues and waste . The company’s Cellic® products represent the pinnacle of 15 years of extensive laboratory research (the single largest R&D effort in the company’s history), innovative scientific discovery, and close collaboration with technical and commercial partners .

In 2009, Cellic® CTec and HTec were launched, providing an effective enzyme cocktail for large-scale testing in advanced biofuel pilot plants . By 2010, Cellic® CTec2 became the first commercially-viable cellulase, enabling operation of a number of demonstration scale plants . The strong performance of CTec2 favorably impacted production economies, such that planning for the first commercial scale plants accelerated .

Cellic® CTec3/HTec3 launched in 2012, enabling the first commercial-scale biorefineries to begin production . The past two years have seen growth in commercial scale production, with five commercial scale cellulosic biorefineries that utilize biochemical conversion technology (Beta-Renewables, GranBio,

Raizen, Poet and Abengoa) coming online . CTec3/HTec3 performance reduced enzyme costs by an average of 1 .5X over CTec2, due to robust enzyme performance across a range of industrial feedstocks . With CTec3, Novozymes has been able to broadly demonstrate the vision of a sustainable, bio-based society . Production of advanced fuels and chemicals is reliant on cost-effective technology for conversion of biomass to sugars, and CTec3 represents a huge step forward in the transition from an oil-based economy to a bio-based economy .

Novozymes has consistently been recognized for its leadership in sustainability and innovation including the following:

» George Washington Carver Award,The Biotechnology Industry Organization, 2012 to Steen Riisgaard, President and CEO of Novozymes in recognition of an individual who has made a significant contribution to building the bio-based economy by applying industrial biotechnology to create sustainable and environmentally friendlier products .

» Dow Jones Sustainability Index leader 12 years running; In 2014 and 2015, top 3 percentile of sustainability leaders in its sector .

» World Leader for Corporate Action on Climate Change, A List, CDP Climate Performance Leadership Index, 2014 .

» ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) Leader - Chemical Sector, MSCI Global Sustainability Index, 2014 .

» Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World index, Corporate Knights, 2014 .

» Biofuels Leadership Award, World Biofuels Markets, 2012 .

» #4 Hottest Companies in Bioenergy, Biofuels Digest, 2014 .

Page 8: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

8

AwArds

symposium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

accepting the award for novozymes:

sarah TeterDr . Sarah A . Teter is a Staff Scientist at Novozymes, Inc ., where she manages Novozymes’ global portfolio of biomass conversion research projects . Teter’s research has had a significant impact on reducing costs of biomass sugars, for production of fuels and chemicals . Through directed research to improve the performance of cellulases, hemicellulases, and auxillary enzymes, along with innovations in expression technology, Novozymes has launched the Cellic® enzyme product line, which is currently being used by global industry front-runners in commercial scale production of cellulosic ethanol . Teter has extensive experience in coordinating large global research teams; the Novozymes biomass conversion R&D team numbers more than 150 scientific staff, covering technical aspects such as protein engineering, enzyme chemistry, protein expression and production, as well as customer-facing application engineering . Teter has worked on biomass R&D at Novozymes since 2001, and has served as the principal investigator on awards from the U .S . Department of Energy (2008-2011; 2013-current) . Teter’s technical training

includes post-doctorate studies at University of Michigan (1999-2001) and Max-Planck Institute for Biochemistry (1997-1999), a Ph .D . from UC Davis (1997), and a B .A . from Swarthmore College (1992) .

past bioeconomy leadership awardee

2014 Genomatica

2015 banqueT speakerstuart sandin, uC san Diego/scripps institution of oceanography

Dr . Stuart Sandin is an associate professor of marine ecology at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego . His research addresses questions of coral reef community ecology, with a particular emphasis on how environmental conditions and human activities can influence this ecology, both for better and for worse . Sandin and his lab group work across the world’s tropical seas, from the Caribbean to the Pacific and spanning popular dive destinations through to remote and uninhabited islands that have never before been visited by scientists . These islands serve as the basis of a global-scale natural experiment, providing unique insights into how coral reefs work today and how we can manage these ecosystems so that they will remain productive into the future .

Title of Talk: Sharks, snappers, and corals: How the remote Pacific ocean offers optimism about the future of coral reefs

Page 9: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

9

General InformatIon

SympoSIum on BIotechnoloGy for fuelS and chemIcalS 2015

All meeting activities will take place in the Hyatt Regency La Jolla .

registrationOn-site registration, Exhibitor registration, and distribution of meeting packets will take place in Foyer II, Ballroom Level during the following hours:

Monday, April 27 9:00 am–6:00 pm

Tuesday, April 28 7:00 am–6:00 pm

Wednesday, April 29 7:00 am–12:00 pm

Thursday, April 30 7:00 am–6:00 pm

Programs will be distributed at the meeting to all attendees . (Extra copies of the meeting program at the meeting site are $50 .)

Name badges must be worn by all attendees, including guests, for admittance to the scientific sessions, exhibits, and special functions .

Smoking is not permitted in the hotel .

special needsStaff at the SIMB registration desk in Grand Foyer can assist with any special needs .

membership TableThe SIMB Membership Committee would like to welcome new members, first-time attendees and students to the Symposium . Please visit the membership table to learn more about SIMB and its memberships benefits .

Foyer II, Ballroom Level

TwitterMessages and announcements will be tweeted at #37SBFC . In case of emergency, registrants may be contacted through the Hyatt Regency La Jolla at Aventine, 3777 La Jolla Village Drive, San Diego, CA 92122 USA; 1-858-552-1234; www.lajollahyatt.com .

mealsWelcome to SBFC Refreshment Break

Monday, April 27 11:00 am–3:00 pm

� Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

Exhibits/Poster Sessions/Reception

Monday–Tuesday, April 27–28 6:00–9:00 pm

� Aventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

Continental Breakfast – all attendees

Tuesday–Thursday, April 28–30 7:00–8:00 am

� Asteria Terrace, Ballroom Level

Invited Speaker Breakfast

Breakfast for invited speakers/session chairs on day of presentation

Monday, April 27 9:00–10:00 am

Tuesday–Thursday, April 28–30 7:00–8:00 am

� Milos Room, Second Floor Conference Level

Lunch – on your own

Hospitality Event - open to all attendees

Sponsored by Katzen International

Wednesday, April 29 After close of the evening sessions

� Asteria Terrace

Thursday night reception and banquetPre-Banquet Reception

Sponsored by Vogelbusch GmbH

Thursday, April 30 6:00–7:00 pm

� Poolside West, Ballroom Level

Banquet, Award Presentations, and Banquet Address

Sponsored by Novozymes

Thursday, April 30 7:00–9:30 pm

� Aventine Ballroom, Ballroom Level

Banquet Speaker: Stuart Sandin, Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD, San Diego, CA

Talk Title: “Sharks, snappers and corals: How the remote Pacific ocean offers optimism about the future of the coral reefs”

general informaTion

Page 10: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

10

General InformatIon

SympoSIum on BIotechnoloGy for fuelS and chemIcalS 2015

aTTenTion speakers anD posTer presenTersThank you for once again contributing to the success of the 37th Symposium on Biotechnology for Fuels and Chemicals in San Diego, California .

You are encouraged to upload a PDF of your presentation to the Confex abstract management site (https://sim.confex.com/sim/37th/cfp.cgi) by using your abstract ID# and password that was provided when you first submitted your abstract . Presentations will be made available only to meeting attendees via special access code and password .

Instructions for uploading PDF copies of presentations to the Confex site have been sent to authors of oral and poster presentations If you have not received this email communication, a follow-up email will be sent the week of May 11 .

aTTenDee aCCess To presenTaTionsAttendee login access to uploads of presentations will be provided via email . Everyone who registered and paid for the meeting, including those who are no-shows and cancellations not eligible for refunds, will receive the login access . In addition, those who are no-shows or cancelled but paid to attend the meeting will receive a program book via regular mail .

meeTing room inTerneT CoDesnetwork: simb

passkey: simb2015

Page 11: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

11

Floor Plans

symPosium on Biotechnology For Fuels and chemicals 2015

hoTelhyatt regency la Jolla at aventine

Page 12: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

12

Floor Plans

symPosium on Biotechnology For Fuels and chemicals 2015

exh

ibiT

ha

ll f

loo

r pl

an

gra

nd f

oyer

, bal

lroom

lev

el

Page 13: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

13

exhibitors

symposium on biotechnology for fuels and chemicals 2015

TableTop exhibiTsCompany representatives will be available during the Symposium . Please visit the exhibitors in the Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level, during the show hours listed:

monday, april 27 11:00 am–3:00 pm

5:00–8:00 pm

Tuesday, april 28 7:00–8:00 am

9:15–9:45 am

2:15–2:45 pm

5:00–8:00 pm

Wednesday, april 29 7:00–8:00 am

9:15–9:45 am

Exhibits Dismantle: 10:00 am–2:00 pm

exhibiTorsAndritz, Inc. Glens Falls, NY Tabletop #21

Andritz, a global market leader for customized plants, systems and services for various specialized industries is applying proven process technology, concepts and machines from the pulp and paper and environmental industry with minor modifications on various types of lingo-cellulosic feedstocks for pre-treatment systems, liquid solid separation or reactor feed systems in the biofuels area .

Applikon Biotechnology, Inc. Foster City, CA Tabletop #20

Bioengineering, Inc. Somerville, MA Tabletop #4

Bioexpression and Fermentation Facility @ UGA Athens, GA Tabletop #19

The Bioexpression and Fermentation Facility at UGA provides services to clients in fermentation (750mL – 750L), downstream processing, protein purification (gram scale high purity), cell culture (CHO/HEK to 25L), analytical services and monoclonal antibodies . The Professional Science Master’s Program trains students in the science and business of Biomanufacturing & Bioprocessing .

BlueSens gas sensor GmbH Herten, Germany Tabletop #11

BlueSens - understanding bioprocesses .The German BlueSens gas sensor GmbH develops and markets gas analyzers for bioprocesses . The sensors are installed in the fermenter and the measurement and logging of vital gases (e .g .: O2/CO2, EtOH, H2, CH4) in real-time helps to understand and to optimize the metabolic processes .

Chemglass Life Sciences Vineland, NJ Tabletop #3

Chemglass Life Sciences a leading manufacturer of scientific glassware and apparatus in Vineland, NJ offers a complete line of cell and tissue culture products including: Spinner Flasks, Magnetic Stirrers, Cell Culture Bags, Incubators, Shake Flasks, Tissue Culture Plastic Ware, Rockers, Shakers, Reusable Lab Ware, Rotators, and Culture Tubes .

Eppendorf Hauppauge, NY Tabletop #1

Eppendorf is a leading life science company that develops and supplies bioprocess instruments catering to microbial and cell culture applications . The product range includes DASGIP and New Brunswick Bioprocessing systems and software solutions . The product portfolio includes Stand-Alone, Parallel and Single-Use systems with working volumes from 60mL to 2,400L all from one source, Eppendorf .

Page 14: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

14

exhibitors

symposium on biotechnology for fuels and chemicals 2015

Flownamics, Inc. Madison, WI Tabletop #7

Flownamics® designs easy-to-operate, high quality products to better serve the bioprocessing industry . Our products include the industry standard FISP® sterile, in-situ, sampling probe and the Seg-Flow® automated online sampling and feed control system . Flownamics also provides custom products and services for improving bioprocess monitoring and control .

à www.flownamics.com

Hamilton Company Reno, NV Tabletop #2

Hamilton Company produces process sensors including pH, optical dissolved oxygen, viable cell density, optical density, and conductivity . Hamilton Arc products replace traditional transmitters via placement of a microprocessor inside the sensor . Arc sensors measure more reliably and save on cost by communicating directly with the process control system . Our viable cell density instrument measures living cells in-line through capacitance based measurement .

INFORS USA Laurel, MD Tabletop #17

m2p-labs, Inc. Hauppauge, NY Tabletop #18

m2p-labs, a worldwide leading supplier of microbioreactors, offers the BioLector®, RoboLec tor® (automation) and disposable FlowerPlate® (MTP) providing an intelligent micro fermentation platform for screening and bioprocess development . The number and the information content of microbial and cell culture experiments can be increased, and be conducted with greater efficiency, better quality and lower cost .

Molecular Devices, LLC Sunnyvale, CA Tabletop #23

At Molecular Devices, we enable our customers to unravel the complexity of biological systems . Our innovative instruments, scientific expertise, assays, and analytics tools for cell and protein biology enable scientists to see more, do more, and know more, in order to answer life’s most important questions .

à www.moleculardevices.com

MOUBIO Taipei, Taiwan Tabletop #9

Six-speed plug-and-play universally designed mini reactor modules cover two orders of magnitude of kLa, working volume 50-1000mL and agitation 30-1100rpm, while are repeatedly autoclavable and work with bottom magnetic-drive, general chemical engineering applications and as fittings for novel customization . Quality and custom services since 2006, Moubio helps you to take the first step in engineering microbiology, high throughput or not! (031915/dgm)

Semba Biosciences Inc. Madison, WI Tabletop #22

Semba Biosciences Inc. is a life science company based in Madison, Wisconsin, USA . Founded in 2005, the company pioneered the development of bench top SMB chromatography systems . Our Octave™ line of Chromatography Systems, Pumps and accessories provides a new level of reliable means of separation perfectly suited for developing cost-efficient and scalable renewable chemicals purification processes .

USDOE - Bioenergy Technologies Office Washington, DC Tabletop #20

The U .S . Department of Energy’s Bioenergy Technologies Office supports targeted research, development, demonstration and deployment activities to promote the production of advanced biofuels that will reduce our reliance on petroleum, mitigate climate change, create jobs and increase U .S . energy security .

YSI Life Sciences Yellow Springs, OH Tabletop #24

With over 10,000 instruments in use world-wide, YSI Life Sciences is the leading provider of at-line and on-line biochemistry analysis for a wide range of bioprocessing and research applications, including biopharmaceutical, biofuel, food and beverage and clinical research . Leveraging our innovative biosensor technology, YSI’s biochemistry analyzers provide rapid, accurate analysis of carbohydrates, alcohols, amino acids and electrolytes .

Page 15: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

15

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

mon

day,

apr

il 27

monDay, april 27 exhibits set up

8:00–11:00 am � Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

registration

8:00 am–6:00 pm � Foyer II, Ballroom Level

Continental breakfast

9:00–10:00 am � Asteria Terrace, Ballroom Level

speaker/session Chair breakfast

9:00–10:00 am � Milos Room, Second Floor Conference Level

exhibits open for “Welcome to sbfC” refreshment break

11:00 am–1:00 pm � Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

poster set up

11:00 am–5:00 pm � Aventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

opening remarks and rapid fire poster showcase

12:00–1:00 pm � Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

session 1: feedstocks i: genetics and recalcitranceChairs: S . Thomas, DOE, Golden, CO and W . Muchero, Oak

Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN

� Aventine Ballroom G, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 1-1: Genetic complexity and bioenergy potential of forage maize L.M. Trindade* and A. Torres, Wageningen University,

Wageningen, Netherlands

1:25 pm 1-2: Impact of modified lignocellulosic feedstocks on cell wall porosity, swellability, and enzymatic hydrolysis J. Crowe* and M. Li, Michigan State University, East

Lansing, MI; D.B. Hodge, Michigan State University,

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, East Lansing,

MI

1:50 pm 1-3: Biomass water interactions as a tool for explaining the recalcitrance of pretreated materials: towards a fundamental understanding of water in bioprocesses N.D. Weiss*, M. Selig, C.W.C. Hsieh, C. Felby and L.G.

Thygesen, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C,

Denmark

2:15 pm Break Sponsored by DuPont Industrial Biosciences

2:45 pm 1-4: The role of glycoside hydrolases in reducing cell wall recalcitrance R. Brunecky*, H. Wei, B. Donohoe and M.E. Himmel,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

3:10 pm 1-5: Populus trichocarpa natural variants as feedstocks for biofuel production J. Chen*, M. Wellington, K. Yee, O.A. Thompson, K.

Feng, A.C. Bryan, S. Jawdy, L.E. Gunter and G. Tuskan,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN;

L. Evans and S. DiFazio, West Virginia University,

Morgantown, WV

3:35 pm 1-6: Characterizing cell wall crosslinking and/or entanglement in reduced recalcitrance feedstocks E. Gjersing*, B. Donohoe and M. Davis, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

4:00 pm 1-7: Optimizing miscanthus biomass quality for biofuel production T. van der Weijde*, O. Dolstra and L.M. Trindade,

Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands

session 2: renewable fuels, Chemicals, and bio-based products i: bulk Chemicals and Co-products Chairs: R . Bakker, Wageningen U, Wageningen, Netherlands

and S .C . Liang, DuPont Industrial BioSciences, Wilmington, DE

� Aventine Ballroom DEF, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 2-1: Anaerobic granular sludge as a biocatalyst for 1,3-propanediol production from glycerol in continuous bioreactors R. Gallardo, C. Faria, L.R. Rodrigues and M. Alves*,

Centre of Biological Engineering, University of Minho,

Braga

Page 16: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

16

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

monday, a

pril 27

1:25 pm 2-2: Simultaneous production of furfural, bromomethyl furfural and high-quality lignin from lignocellulosic biomass in a biphasic process involving molten salt hydrate C.G. Yoo, S. Zhang and X. Pan*, University of

Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI

1:50 pm 2-3: Pilot scale production of fermentable sugars from corn stover via distributed preprocessing B.D. Bals*, S. Jadhav, J. Wynn, F. Teymouri, S.

Schwegmann, S. Boles, K. Sanders, T.J. Campbell and

T. Tiedje, MBI International, Lansing, MI; C. Sarks, DOE

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, Lansing, MI; D.

Bruce, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI

2:15 pm Break Sponsored by DuPont Industrial Biosciences

2:45 pm 2-4: Syngas production at pilot scale from the residue of lignocellulosic based biorefinery F. Zimbardi, C. Nadia* and V. Valerio, Italian National

Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable

Economic Development - ENEA, Rotondella, Italy; L.

Contuzzi, M. Carnevale and A. Villone, Italian National

Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable

Economic Development - ENEA

3:10 pm 2-5: Lignin valorization through biological funneling and chemical catalysis G.T. Beckham*, M.A. Franden, M.T. Guarnieri, C.W.

Johnson, E. Karp, J.G. Linger, D. Salvachua and D.R.

Vardon, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

3:35 pm 2-6: Aqueous phase hydrodeoxygenation of biomass-derived lignin to its substructure based hydrocarbons and chemicals H. Wang, H. Ruan and B. Yang*, Washington State

University, Richland, WA; M.P. Tucker, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

4:00 pm 2-7: Recent advances in the use Lactobacillus diolivorans for fermentation of crude glycerol to 1,3 propanediol J. Modl*, Vogelbusch GmbH, Vienna, Austria; H. Marx

and M. Sauer, CD Laboratory for Biotechnology of

Glycerol, Vienna

session 3: microbial science and Technology i: bacteria Chairs: K .M . Pappas, University of Athens, Athens, Greece and

J . Westpheling, University of Georgia, Athens, GA

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 3-1: Natural gas bioconversion to liquid fuels and chemicals E. Groban*, Intrexon Corporation, South San Francisco,

CA

1:25 pm 3-2: (Halo)alcaliphilic methanotrophs: new microbial platform for producing fuels and chemicals from methane S. But, University of California, San Diego, San Diego,

CA, E.E. Allen, University of California, San Diego, La

Jolla, CA, M.E. Lidstrom, University of Washington,

Seattle, WA and M. Kalyuzhnaya*, San Diego State

University, San Diego, CA

1:50 pm 3-3: Engineering Rhodococcus to convert biomass to triacylglycerides L.D. Eltis*, N. Seghezzi, S. Amara, C. Diaz-Salazar

and R. Roccor, The University of British Columbia,

Vancouver, BC

2:15 pm Break Sponsored by DuPont Industrial Biosciences

2:45 pm 3-4: Pathways for biological conversion of lignin to lipids- a case study on Rhodococcus strains X. Xue*, L. Li and B. Yang, Washington State University,

Richland, WA; D. Zhu, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang,

China; J.R. Cort, Pacific Northwest National

Laboratory, Richland, WA

3:10 pm 3-5: Dynamic metabolic control using synthetic metabolic valves in two-stage fermentations Z. Ye* and M. Lynch, Duke University, Durham, NC

3:35 pm 3-6: Biological lignocellulose solubilization: comparative evaluation of biocatalysts and enhancement via cotreatment J. Paye*, A. Guseva, S. Hammer, M. Balch and L.

Lynd, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; M. Davis, E.

Gjersing and B. Donohoe, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO; B.H. Davison, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; M.G. Hahn and S.

Pattathil, University of Georgia, Athens, GA

Page 17: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

17

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Tues

day,

apr

il 28

4:00 pm 3-7: Genes that contribute to biomass deconstruction by members of the genus Caldicellulosiruptor J. Young, J. Groom, M.G. Hahn and D. Mohnen,

University of Georgia, Athens, GA; J. Westpheling*,

University of Georgia, Athens, GA, and BioEnergy

Science Center, Biosciences Division of DOE, Oak

Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; D. Chung,

University of Georgia, Athens, GA, and BioEnergy

Science Center, Biosciences Division of DOE, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory; Y.J. Bomble and M.E. Himmel,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

2:15–2:45 pm Break Sponsored by DuPont Industrial Biosciences

exhibits only open

5:00–6:00 pm � Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

exhibits, poster session 1, and reception

6:00–9:00 pm � Aventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

posTer session 1: bioprocessing, reactor Design, and separations Technology; enzyme science and Technology; feedstocks; pretreatment and fractionation

� Aventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

TuesDay, april 28Continental breakfast

7:00–8:00 am � Asteria Terrace, Ballroom Level

exhibits open

7:00–8:00 am � Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

registration

7:00 AM–6:00 pm � Foyer II, Ballroom Level

speaker/session Chair breakfast

7:00–8:00 am � Milos Room, Second Floor Conference Level

session 4: feedstocks ii: structure, Composition, propertiesChairs: A . Mittal, NREL, Golden, CO and S . Pattathil, University

of Georgia, Athens, GA

� Aventine Ballroom DEF, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 4-1: Estimating the lignin composition of sugarcane hybrids with varied lignin content by pyrolysis-GC/MS T.H. Costa*, A.M.F. Milagres and A. Ferraz, Escola de

Engenharia de Lorena - USP, Lorena, Brazil; A. Eudes

and H.V. Scheller, Joint BioEnergy Institute - Lawrence

Berkeley National Laboratory, Emeryville, CA

8:25 am 4-2: Performance of storage-degraded switchgrass in dilute-acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis L.M. Wendt*, W.A. Smith, A.E. Ray, D. Stevens, D.L.

Daubaras and I.J. Bonner, Idaho National Laboratory,

Idaho Falls, ID; M. Buser, Oklahoma State University,

Stillwater, OK

8:50 am 4-3: Selective removal of ash and specific elements of ash in air classified fractions of loblolly pine forest residues J.A. Lacey*, J. Aston, T. Westover, R. Cherry and D.N.

Thompson, Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID

9:15 am Break

Page 18: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

18

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Tuesday, april 28

9:45 am 4-4: Attributes of energy cane for biofuel production B.A. Saville* and T. Brummels, Canergy LLC, San Diego,

CA

10:10 am 4-5: Brown seaweed processing: enzymatic saccharification of Laminaria digitata requires no pre-treatment D. Manns*, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs.

Lyngby

10:35 am 4-6: Inorganics in lignocellulosic biomass N. Labbé*, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN;

S. Chmely, C. Hamilton and K. Kim, The university of

Tennessee, Knoxville, TN

11:00 am 4-7: NIR/PLS models to predict pretreated corn stover slurry solids composition, isolated and in-situ A. Sluiter* and E. Wolfrum, National Renewable Energy

Lab, Golden, CO

session 5: pretreatment and fractionation i: alkaline and neutral Chemistries Chairs: B . Yang, Washington State University, Richland, WA

and M . Holtzapple, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

� Aventine Ballroom G, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 5-1: Effective copper-catalyzed alkaline-oxidative pretreatment of woody biomass E.L. Hegg*, A. Bhalla, N. Bansal and D.B. Hodge,

Michigan State University, Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, East Lansing, MI; Z. Li, Oregon State

University, Corvallis, OR; R.J. Stoklosa, Michigan State

University, East Lansing, MI

8:25 am 5-2: Impact of ecofriendly pretreatments on lignocellulose properties and its digestibility by a hydrolytic microbial consortium A. Lazuka*, L. Auer, C. Roland, M. O’Donohue and

G. Hernandez-Raquet, INRA, LISBP, 135 Avenue de

Rangueil, F-31077 Toulouse, France, Toulouse, France

8:50 am 5-3: Effect of pretreatment techniques and micronutrient supplementation on substrate solubilization, volatile fatty acid production and hydrogen generation by thermophilic anaerobic digestion of food waste A. Menon*, F. Ren and A. Giannis, Nanyang

Technological University, Singapore, Singapore; J.Y.

Wang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 5-4: Novel DDR processing of corn stover achieves high monomeric sugar concentrations from enzymatic hydrolysis (230 g/L) and high ethanol concentration (10% v/v) during fermentation X. Chen*, E. Jennings, J. Shekiro, E.M. Kuhn, M. O’Brien,

W. Wang, D.J. Schell, R.T. Elander and M.P. Tucker,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO;

M. Himmel, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

and BioEnergy Science Center (BESC), Golden, CO

10:10 am 5-5: An examination of the efficacy of aqueous ammonia pretreatment at different scales A. Athmanathan*, S. Trupia and T. Lash, Southern

Illinois University, Edwardsville, Edwardsville, IL

10:35 am 5-6: Application of hydrodynamic cavitation as a physico-chemical pretreatment method for bioethanol production J.I. Han*, I. Kim and M.A. Ahmed, Korea Advanced

Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon

11:00 am 5-7: Kinetic characterization of flowthrough pretreatment L. Zhang*, L. Yan and B. Yang, Washington State

University, Richland, WA

Page 19: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

19

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Tues

day,

apr

il 28

session 6: microbial science and Technology ii: yeast Chairs: K . Salmon, BP Biofuels, San Diego, CA and K . Olofsson,

Terranol A/S, Lyngby, Denmark

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 6-1: Genomic sequencing reveals four major yeast clades of biotechnological interest T.W. Jeffries*, Xylome Corporation, Madison, WI;

S. Haridas, A. Salamov, R. Riley and I. Grigoriev,

Department of Energy, Walnut Creek, CA; M. Göker,

Leigniz Institute, Braunschweig, Germany; C.T.

Hittinger, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison,

WI; H.P. Klenk, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon

Tyne; C. Kurtzman, United States Department of

Agriculture, Peoria, IL; M. Blackwell, Louisiana State

University, Baton Rouge, LA; K. Wolfe, University

College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

8:25 am 6-2: Optimizing CBP yeasts for lignocellulose conversion W.H. van Zyl*, H. Kroukamp and J.H.D. van Zyl,

Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa; R.

den Haan, University of the Western Cape, Bellville,

South Africa; J.M. van Zyl, Stellenbosch University,

Stellenbosch

8:50 am 6-3: Recent strain and fermentation development for commercial ethanol production using xylose fermenting yeast K. Olofsson*, O. Sibbesen, T. Hvid Andersen and B.

Rønnow, Terranol A/S, Lyngby, Denmark

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 6-4: The challenges of recycling Saccharomyces cerevisiae for lignocellulosic hydrolysate fermentations C. Sarks*, M. Jin, S. Xue and V. Balan, DOE Great Lakes

Bioenergy Research Center, Lansing, MI; A. Higbee, J.

Piotrowski and T.K. Sato, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Madison, WI; B.E. Dale, DOE Great

Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, Michigan State

University, Lansing, MI

10:10 am 6-5: Membrane engineering for reduced acetic acid stress: insights from Zygosaccharomyces bailii L. Lindahl*, L. Olsson and M. Bettiga, Chalmers

University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden; S.

Genheden, University of Southampton, Southampton,

UK; L.A. Eriksson, University of Gothenburg,

Gothenburg, Sweden

10:35 am 6-6: Anaerobic xylose fermentation through modification of kinase signaling pathways and iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis in yeast T.K. Sato*, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research

Center, Madison, WI; A.P. Gasch, C.T. Hittinger, Y.

Zhang and R. Landick, University of Wisconsin-

Madison, Madison, WI

11:00 am 6-7: Organic acids from lignocellulose: Candida lignohabitans as a new microbial cell factory M. Bellasio, University of natural resources and

life sources, Vienna, Austria; D. Mattanovich,

BOKU - University of Natural Resources and Life

Sciences, Vienna, Austria; M. Sauer and H. Marx*, CD

Laboratory for Biotechnology of Glycerol, Vienna

11:30 am–1:00 pm Lunch on your own

session 7: renewable fuels, Chemicals, and bio-based products ii: specialty and higher Value Chemicals Chairs: M . van den Berg, DSM, Delft, Netherlands and M .

Tobin, Amyris, Emeryville, CA

� Aventine Ballroom G, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 7-1: Isomerization of glucose to fructose and mannose X. Qian*, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR

1:25 pm 7-2: Biobased production of arginine by metabolically engineered Escherichia coli M. Ginesy, P. Christakopoulos and U. Rova*, Luleå

University of Technology, Luleå, Sweden

1:50 pm 7-3: Glucose based production of L-methionine with E. coli R. Takors*, M. Rahnert and A. Teleki, Institute of

Biochemical Engineering, Stuttgart; H. Priefert, B.

Bathe and I. Ochrombel, Evonik Industries AG, Halle

2:15 pm Break

Page 20: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

20

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Tuesday, april 28

2:45 pm 7-4: Attempts to detoxify sorghum bran hydrolysates for the production of itaconic acid from sorghum bran A. Ahmed El-Imam* and C. Du, University of

Nottingham, Leicestershire; P. Dyer, University of

Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom

3:10 pm 7-5: Achieving arabitol-free xylitol production through modified xylose reductase in a Candida tropicalis isolate A. Somani*, University of Aberystwyth, Aberystwyth;

D.N. Bryant and J.A. Gallagher, Aberystwyth

University, Aberystwyth, United Kingdom; S. Rao

Ravella, University of Aberystwyth, Aberystwyth (UK);

N. Fernandez-Fuentes, University of Aberystwyth,

Aberystwyth, UK

3:35 pm 7-6: Synthesis of hydrophobic esters with yeast surface displayed-lipase J. Eby and S.W. Peretti*, North Carolina State

University, Raleigh, NC

4:00 pm 7-7: Lignins from biochemical processing of lignocellulose-struture and potential applications C. Felby*, D. Cannella and A. Jensen, University

of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark; Y.C.

Orozco, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C;

M.A. Tengstedt Hansen, University of Copenhagen,

Frederiksber C; J.B. Nielsen and A.D. Jensen, Technical

University of Denmark, Lyngby

session 8: enzyme science and Technology i: modeling and structure/function Chairs: B . Knott, NREL, Golden, CO and J . Stahlberg, SLU,

Uppsala, Sweden

� Aventine Ballroom DEF, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 8-1: Structure, function and application of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) V.G.H. Eijsink*, B. Westereng, Z. Forsberg, S.J. Horn

and G. Vaaje-Kolstad, Norwegian University of Life

Sciences, Aas, Norway

1:25 pm 8-2: Expression, crystal structure and cellulase activity of the thermostable cellobiohydrolase Cel7A from the fungus Humicola grisea var . thermoidea J. Ståhlberg*, M.H. Momeni, H. Hansson, S.

Karkehabadi and M. Sandgren, Swedish University

of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden; F.

Goedegebuur, DuPont Industrial Biosciences, Leiden,

The Netherlands; E. Larenas and C. Mitchinson,

DuPont Industrial Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA

1:50 pm 8-3: Kinetic models of cellulase-lignin interaction: structural contributions to adsorption kinetics K. Pfeiffer*, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, D. Clark, UC

Berkeley and H.W. Blanch, University of California -

Berkeley, Berkeley, CA

2:15 pm Break

2:45 pm 8-4: The unexpected importance of actinobacterial GH12 in hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose J. Hiras*, Y.W. Wu and S. Singer, Joint BioEnergy

Institute, Emeryville, CA; S.G. Tringe, Joint Genome

Institute, Walnut Creek, CA; C. Nicora, J. Aldrich, E.

Robinson and J. Jacobs, Environmental Molecular

Sciences Laboratory, Richland, WA; B. Simmons, Joint

BioEnergy Institute / Sandia National Laboratories,

Emeryville, CA

3:10 pm 8-5: Prospecting for cellulases from the marine environment: structure and function of novel GH7 and GH9 family glycoside hydrolases J. McGeehan*, R. Fewings, A. Ebrahim, S. Mallinson, A.

Swiderska, G. Kneale, C. Wu and S. Cragg, University

of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK; S.E. Hobdey, K.

Podkaminer, L.E. Taylor II, S.R. Decker, M.E. Himmel

and G.T. Beckham, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO; N. Bruce and S. McQueen-

Mason, University of York, York; L. Anderson and K.

Schnorr, Novozymes A/S, Bagsvaerd, DK; J. Sanchez-

Weatherby and T. Sorensen, Diamond Light Source,

Oxfordshire, UK

Page 21: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

21

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Tues

day,

apr

il 28

3:35 pm 8-6: A superfamily of polysaccharide monooxygenases V.V. Vu*, E.A. Span and M.A. Marletta, The Scripps

Research Institute, La Jolla, CA; W.T. Beeson and C.M.

Phillips, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley,

CA; D.L.M. Suess and R.D. Britt, University of California

at Davis, Davis, CA; E.R. Farquhar, Brookhaven

National Laboratory, Upton, NY; J.H.D. Cate, Lawrence

Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA

4:00 pm 8-7: Protein stability engineering by structure-guided chimeragenesis T. Kaper*, S. Sunux, A. Liu and R. Bott, DuPont

Industrial Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA; I. Nikolaev,

DuPont Industrial Biosciences, Leiden, Netherlands;

N. Mikkelsen, H. Hansson, M. Gudmundsson and

M. Sandgren, Swedish University of Agricultural

Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden; S. Karkehabadi, Swedish

Agricultural University, Uppsala, Sweden

session 9: pretreatment and fractionation ii: acidic ChemistriesSponsored by AdvanceBio

Chairs: R . Kumar, Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Center for Environmental Research and Technology, Bourns College of Engineering, University of California Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Riverside, CA and K .H . Kim, Korea University Graduate School, Seoul, South Korea

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 9-1: pH-profiling in SPORL for high titer and yield ethanol production from undetoxified whole slurry of Douglas Fir forest residue J.Y. Zhu* and R. Gleisner, USDA, Forest Service,

Forest Products Lab, Madison, WI; J. Cheng, Nanjing

Forestry University; S.Y. Leu, Hongkong Polytechnique

University

1:25 pm 9-2: Production of low-cost sugar using mechanical refining of pretreated biomass S. Park*, B. Jones, J. Park, R. Venditti, H. Jameel, H.M.

Chang and R. Phillips, North Carolina State University,

Raleigh, NC

1:50 pm 9-3: Steam pretreatment: a robust method for processing mixtures of hybrid poplar and wheat straw . Sugar yields, economics and environmental implications R. Morales Vera* and R. Bura, University of

Washington, Seattle, WA

2:15 pm Break

2:45 pm 9-4: One Carbofrac® for multiple feedstocks, processes and products M.B. Pedersen* and R. Skovgaard-Petersen, BioGasol

ApS, Ballerup, Denmark

3:10 pm 9-5: Pretreatment scale up of switchgrass: lessons learned C.R.W. Gerken*, ICM, Inc, St. Joseph, MO; X. Li and L.

Putnam, Novozymes North America, Inc., Franklinton,

NC

3:35 pm 9-6: Residence time distribution of a continuous pilot plant horizontal pretreatment reactor at various conditions D.A. Sievers*, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

4:00 pm 9-7: Pretreatment, can we achieve effective biomass hydrolysis without removing lignin? R.P. Chandra* and J. Saddler, University of British

Columbia, Vancouver, BC

exhibits only open5:00–6:00 pm

� Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

exhibits, poster session 2, and reception6:00–9:00 pm

� Aventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

posTer session 2: microbial science and Technology; renewable fuels, Chemicals, and bio-based products

Page 22: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

22

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Wednesday, a

pril 29

WeDnesDay, april 29 Continental breakfast

7:00–8:00 am � Asteria Terrace, Ballroom Level

exhibits open

7:00–8:00 am � Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

registration

7:00 am–12:00 pm � Foyer II, Ballroom Level

speaker/session Chair breakfast

7:00–8:00 am � Milos Room, Second Floor Conference Level

session 10: enzyme science and Technology ii: assays, Characterization, and application Chairs: T . Kaper, Dupont Industrial Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA

and V . Arantes, University of São Paulo, Lorena School of Engineering, Sao Paulo, Brazil

� Aventine Ballroom DEF, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 10-1: Using glycome profiling on plant biomass for functional characterization of cell wall hydrolytic enzymes M.G. Hahn*, S. Pattathil, S. Kandemkavil and S.

Venkatachalam, University of Georgia, Athens, GA; S.

Ratnaparkhe, Devi Ahilya Vishwa Vidayalaya, Indore,

India; J. Walker, L. Bergeman and B. Fox, University of

Wisconsin, Madison, WI

8:25 am 10-2: Heads and tails of laccases in bioethanol production E. Tomás-Pejó*, A. Oliva-Taravilla, M. Demuez and

C. González-Fernández, IMDEA Energy, Móstoles;

A.D. Moreno*, Chalmers University of Technology,

Gothenburg, Sweden; P. Alvira, INSA, Toulouse; D.

Ibarra, CIFOR-INIA, Madrid; M. Ballesteros, CIEMAT,

Madrid, Spain

8:50 am 10-3: Countercurrent saccharification M.T. Holtzapple*, Texas A&M University, College

Station, TX

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 10-4: Studies about reversibility binding of cellulases to cellulose and biomass V.D.O.A. Pellegrini*, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Sao

Carlos, Brazil, Brazil, I. Polikarpov, Universidade de

Sao Paulo, Sao Carlos, Brazil and P. Westh, Roskilde

University, Roskilde, Denmark

10:10 am 10-5: Oxidoreductases in biomass saccharification processes K.S. Johansen*, Novozymes A/S, Bagsvaerd; J. Liu and

H. Xu, Novozymes North America, Franklinton, NC;

H. Ouyang, Novozymes North America; H.Z. Huang,

Novozymes China

10:35 am 10-6: The role of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases in commercial cellulase mixtures G. Müller*, A. Várnai and V. Eijsink, Norwegian

University of Life Sciences, Ås; S.J. Horn, Norwegian

University of Life Sciences, Aas, Norway

11:00 am 10-7: Action of an AA9-type lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase on the cellulose surface and its role for synergy with cellulases B. Nidetzky* and M. Eibinger, Graz University of

Technology, Graz, Austria; T. Ganner and H. Plank, Graz

University of Technology

session 11: feedstocks iii: supply, integrated biorefineries, and sustainabilityChairs: D . Thompson, INL, Idaho Falls, ID and T . Smith,

University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

� Aventine Ballroom G, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 11-1: All biomass is local: economic and environmental performance of cellulosic biofuels depend strongly on logistics and local conditions S. Kim, Michigan State University, Lansing, MI and B.

Dale*, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center,

Lansing, MI

Page 23: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

23

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Wed

nesd

ay, a

pril

29

8:25 am 11-2: Advances in high tonnage supply systems for southern pine biomass S. Taylor*, T. McDonald, M. Smidt and O. Fasina,

Auburn University, Auburn, AL; D. Mitchell, U.S. Forest

Service, Auburn, AL; J. Klepac and J. Thompson, USDA

Forest Service Southern Research Station, Auburn,

AL; R.B. Rummer, University of Kansas, Lawrence,

KS; F. Corley, Corley Land Services, Chapman, AL;

T. Gallagher, Auburn Unversity, Auburn, AL; G.

Somerville, TIgerCat, Inc., Brantford, ON

8:50 am 11-3: Green biorefinery feed protein - influence of harvest method and post-harvest time on protein extraction yield M. Ambye-Jensen*, Aarhus University, Aarhus,

Denmark; L. Stødkilde-Jørgensen, V.K.D. Jensen, S.K.

Jensen and A.P.S. Adamsen, Aarhus University

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 11-4: Predictive modeling can de-risk bio-based production A. Narani*, P. Coffman, J. Gardner, C. Li, T. Pray and

D. Tanjore, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,

Berkeley, CA; N.V.S.N.M. Konda, Joint BioEnergy

Institue, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,

Emeryville, CA; K.L. Kenney, V. Thompson and G.L.

Gresham, Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho Falls,

ID; B. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia

National Laboratories, Emeryville, CA; D. Klein-

Marcuschamer, University of Queensland, St. Lucia,

QLD, Australia

10:10 am 11-5: The effect of feedstock densification on structural sugar release and yield in and biofuel feedstock and feedstock blends E. Wolfrum*, National Renewable Energy Lab, Golden,

CO and N.J. Nagle, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO

10:35 am 11-6: Assessment of municipal solid waste for biochemical and thermochemical conversion pathways V.S. Thompson*, A.E. Ray, D. Stevens, D.L. Daubaras,

A. Hoover and R.M. Emerson, Idaho National

Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID

11:00 am 11-7: Strategies for use of novel, low value, heterogeneous feedstocks for production of fuels and chemicals R. Bura*, R. Morales Vera, C. Dou, S. Ewanick and R.

Gustafson, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; N.

Mori, Engineering School of Lorena- EEL-USP, Lorena-

SP, Brazil

session 12: bioprocessing, reactor Design, and separations Technology i Chairs: J . Pellegrino, University of Colorado-Boulder, Boulder,

CO and T . Deepti, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 12-1: Catalytic membranes for simultaneous biomass hydrolysis and sugar separation X. Qian, R. Wickramasinghe, A. Vu, A. Avram* and P.

Ahmadiannamini, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville,

AR

8:25 am 12-2: Development of a membrane-based separation process for the continuous enzymatic saccharification of lignocellulosic biomass B. Adhikari* and J. Pellegrino, University of Colorado-

Boulder, Boulder, CO; D.A. Sievers and J.J. Stickel,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

8:50 am 12-3:Continuous liquefaction and enzyme reutilization of pretreated lignocellulosic material R.A. Romero*, Andritz, Inc., Glens Falls, NY

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 12-4: Evaluation of sodium sulfite detoxification of pretreated softwood slurries for ethanol production C. Martín Medina, A. Cavka and L.J. Jönsson*, Umeå

University, Umeå, Sweden; B. Alriksson, SP Processum

AB, Örnsköldsvik, Sweden; M. Mörtsell, SEKAB

E-Technology, SE-891 26 Örnsköldsvik, Sweden

10:10 am 12-5: High titer ethanol production from corn stover pretreated solids prepared by novel co-solvent enhanced lignocellulosic fractionation (CELF) pretreatment T.Y. Nguyen*, University of California, Riverside,

Riverside, CA, C. Cai, University of California, Riverside

and BioEnergy Science Center (BESC), Riverside, CA,

R. Kumar, University of California, Riverside and C.E.

Wyman, Department of Chemical and Environmental

Engineering, Center for Environmental Research and

Technology, Bourns College of Engineering, University

of California Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Riverside, CA

Page 24: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

24

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Wednesday, a

pril 29

10:35 am 12-6: Integrating fermentation and separation for the production of advanced biofuels A.S. Heeres*, S. Heijnen, L.A.M. van der Wielen and

M.C. Cuellar, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The

Netherlands

11:00 am 12-7: Use of silicate as an adsorbent for butanol A. Lovelady*, Louisiana State University, St. Gabriel,

LA and D. Day, Louisiana State University Agricultural

Center, Saint Gabriel, LA

exhibits Tear Down

10:00 am–2:00 pm � Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

free afternoon11:30 am–7:00 pm

sbfC organizing Committee meeting

12:00–2:00 pm � Syros Room, Second Floor Conference Level

2016 planning Committee meeting

2:00–3:00 pm � Syros Room, Second Floor Conference Level

session sT1: synthetic biologyChairs: Y . Suzuki, J . Craig Venter Institute, La Jolla, CA and J .

Linger, NREL, Golden, CO

� Aventine Ballroom DEF, Ballroom Level

7:00 pm ST1-1: Emerging trends in synthetic biology: past, present & beyond E. Mathur*, Yulex Corporation, San Diego, CA

7:20 pm ST1-2: The engineering of a multivalent cellulosome on the cell surface of Saccharomyces cerevisiae M. Kostylev*, T. Hanly and Y. Suzuki, J. Craig Venter

Institute, La Jolla, CA

7:40 pm ST1-3: Discovering optimally tailored enzyme cocktails using a synthetic screening tool J. Hahm, P. Harris, S. Hasani, I. Haydon, T. Heu, A.

Jones, M. Lamsa, J. Lin*, F. Liu, R. Mullikin, A. Tejirian,

S. Teter, C. Todd, W. Widner, J. Broering, G. Cooley, K.

Creamer and E. Znameroski, Novozymes Inc., Davis,

CA

8:00 pm ST1-4: Use of synthetic biology to improve bioenergy crops D. Loque*, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley,

CA

8:20 pm ST1-5: The bionic leaf: A platform for scalable and efficient solar-to-fuels transformations using biotic and abiotic catalysts J. P. Torella, C. J. Gagliardi, J. S. Chen, D.K. Bediako, P.

A. Silver and D. G. Nocera, Harvard Medical School;

B. Colón*, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; J. C.

Way, Harvard University

8:40 pm ST1-6: Modular design of butanol production pathway from red sea-weed in Escherichia coli using the synthetic expression controllers G.Y. Jung*, POSTECH, Pohang; H.G. Lim and J.H. Lim,

POSTECH

session sT2: international Commercialization progressCo-sponsored by IEA Bioenergy Task 39

Chairs: J . McMillan, NREL, Golden, CO and J . Saddler, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

7:00 pm ST2-1: Scale-up of Iogen’s process for commercial ethanol production from cellulose at Raizen’s Costa Pinto mill B. Foody* and J.S. Tolan, Iogen Corporation, Ottawa,

ON, Canada

7:20 pm ST2-2: GreenField Specialty Alcohols Inc . (‘GreenField’) status update on the deployment its G2 process and equipment technologies B. Wortzman*, GreenField Specialty Alcohols Inc.,

Toronto, ON, Canada

7:40 pm ST2-3:Update of Abengoa’s Biomass Ethanol Commercialization Q. Ngyuen*, Abengoa, Chesterfield, MO

8:00 pm ST2-4: Lessons learned from 100 years of fermenting complex sugar sources O. Bengtsson*, Borregaard AS, Sarpsborg, Norway

8:20 pm ST2-5: Developing commercial grade bioprocesses: differences in organism and overall process design when using biomass versus conventional sugars K. Yee*, N. Diaz, R. Pacheco and J.D. Trawick,

Page 25: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

25

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Thur

sday

, apr

il 30

Genomatica, Inc., San Diego, CA

8:40 pm ST2-6: Strategies for commercialization of bio-based technology- evolution or revolution? P.W. Madson*, KATZEN International, Inc, Cincinnati,

OH

ThursDay, april 30 Continental breakfast

7:00–8:00 am � Asteria Terrrace, Ballroom Level

registration

7:00 am–6:00 pm � Foyer II, Ballroom Level

speaker/session Chair breakfast

7:00–8:00 am � Milos Room, Second Floor Conference Level

session 13: pretreatment and fractionation iii: ionic liquids and organic solventsChairs: S . Singh, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia National

Laboratories, Emeryville, CA and J .A . Perez, Autonomous University of Nayarit, Tepic, Mexico

� Aventine Ballroom G, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 13-1: Scale-up and process integration of sugar production by acidolysis of single and mixed feedstocks in ionic liquids C. Li*, L. Liang, A. Narani, Q. He, T. Luong, D. Tanjore

and T. Pray, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,

Berkeley, CA; N. Sun, Joint BioEnergy Institute,

Emeryville, CA; F. Xu, Joint BioEnergy Institute/ Sandia

National Lab, Emeryville, CA; V.S. Thompson, Idaho

National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID; B. Simmons and

S. Singh, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia National

Laboratories, Emeryville, CA

8:25 am 13-2: Co-solvent enhanced lignocellulosic fractionation (CELF): a novel and versatile pretreatment to increase yields from biological or catalytic biorefining C.E. Wyman*, Department of Chemical and

Environmental Engineering, Center for Environmental

Research and Technology, Bourns College of

Engineering, University of California Riverside,

and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Riverside, CA; T.Y. Nguyen, University of

California, Riverside, Riverside, CA; V. Lutzke, R. Kumar

and C. Cai, University of California, Riverside and

BioEnergy Science Center (BESC), Riverside, CA

8:50 am 13-3: Pretreatment and saccharification of cassava stems – effects of preparatory starch hydrolysis and comparison of pretreatment using sulfuric acid and ionic liquid C. Martín Medina* and L.J. Jönsson, Umeå University,

Umeå, Sweden; S. Xiong and M. Wei, Swedish

University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå, Sweden

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 13-4: A comparative evaluation of agave bagasse in function of autohydrolysis, AFEX and ionic liquid pretreatment J.A. Perez-Pimienta*, Autonomous University of

Nayarit, Tepic, Mexico; C.A. Flores-Gomez, V. Balan,

L. Sousa and B. Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Lansing, MI; H.A. Ruiz, Autonomous

University of Coahuila, Saltillo, Mexico; N.

Sathitsuksanoh, Joint BioEnergy Institute, Emeryville,

CA; S. Singh and B. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy Institute

/ Sandia National Laboratories, Emeryville, CA

10:10 am 13-5: Novel solid acid catalysts for cellulose hydrolysis and dehydration X. Qian, A. Vu* and R. Wickramasinghe, University of

Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR

10:35 am 13-6: Glycell – Leaf Resources’ pretreatment process for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to fuels and chemicals L. Edye*, Leaf Resources Ltd, Eight Mile Plains,

Queensland, Australia and A. Baker, Leaf Resources

Ltd

Page 26: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

26

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Thursday, april 30

11:00 am 13-7: Impact of municipal solid waste paper mix as a blending agent on enzymatic hydrolysis and acidolysis F. Xu*, Joint BioEnergy Institute/ Sandia National

Lab, Emeryville, CA; N. Sun and N. Sathitsuksanoh,

Joint BioEnergy Institute, Emeryville, CA; V.S.

Thompson, Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho Falls,

ID; C. Li, D. Tanjore and T. Pray, Lawrence Berkeley

National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA; B. Simmons and

S. Singh, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia National

Laboratories, Emeryville, CA

session 14: renewable fuels, Chemicals, and bio-based products iii: advanced biofuels Chairs: C . Asleson, NordYeast Inc ., Englewood, CO and A .

Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil

� Aventine Ballroon DEF, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 14-1: Modification of yeast for the production of butanol by metabolic engineering H. Wang*, R. Swidah, P. Reid, K. Persaud, C. Grant and

M. Ashe, The University of Manchester, Manchester

8:25 am 14-2: Outlook for developing a direct microbial conversion platform for hydrocarbon fuel production from lignocellulosic biomass using Yarrowia

lipolytica M. Zhang*, H. Wei, W. Wang and M.E. Himmel,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

8:50 am 14-3: Application of C5/C6 sugar ethanol fermentation in the Inbicon biorefinery L. Thirup*, C.H. Eriksen and J. Larsen, Dong Energy A/S,

Fredericia, Denmark; M. Elleskov, Dong Energy A/S,

Kalundborg, Denmark

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 14-4: The potential and technology challenges of producing renewable aviation fuels J.S. van Dyk*, K. Gourlay and J. Saddler, University of

British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; S. Karatzos, Steeper

Energy

10:10 am 14-5: Kinetic modeling-based optimization of multi-feed simultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation of wheat straw for ethanol production R. Wang*, J. Westman, P. Unrean, L. Olsson and

C.J. Franzén, Chalmers University of Technology,

Gothenburg, Sweden

10:35 am 14-6: Opportunities and barriers for n-butanol production in integrated first and second generation sugarcane biorefineries in Brazil L. Pereira*, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, SP, Brazil,

Brazil, M. Dias, Universidade Federal de São Paulo,

São José dos Campos, SP, Brazil, A. Mariano, School

of Chemical Engineering, University of Campinas -

Unicamp, Campinas, SP, Brazil, R. Maciel Filho, School

of Chemical Engineering, University of Campinas

(UNICAMP), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil and A.

Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology

Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil

11:00 am 14-7: Medium optimization of simultaneous starch saccharification and ethanol fermentation in biofilm reactors G. Izmirlioglu* and A. Demirci, The Pennsylvania State

University, University Park, PA

session 15: enzyme science and Technology iii: Discovery, engineering, and production Chairs: H . Inoue, National Institute of Advanced Industrial

Science and Technology (AIST), Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan and T . Jeoh, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

8:00 am 15-1: Novel molecular strategies for xylan degradation learned from Xanthomonas phytopathogens C.R. Santos, Z.B. Hoffman, L.H.D.P. Assis, R.V.

Honorato, P.S.L. Oliveira, R. Ruller and M.T. Murakami*,

National Center for Research in Energy and Materials

(CNPEM), Campinas; L.M. Zanphorlin, National

Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM),

Campinas, Brazil

Page 27: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

27

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Thur

sday

, apr

il 30

8:25 am 15-2: Lignocellulose degradation by microbial consortia from phytophagous insect guts: microbial diversity and enzymatic activities C. Dumas*, G. Hernandez-Raquet, M. Abadie, A.

Lazuka and L. Auer, INRA, UMR792, Ingénierie des

Systèmes Biologiques et des Procédés, F-31400

Toulouse, France, Toulouse; A. Gales and J.J. Godon,

INRA UR050, Laboratoire de Biotechnologie de

l’Environnement, Narbonne; M. O’Donohue, INRA,

LISBP, 135 Avenue de Rangueil, F-31077 Toulouse,

France, Toulouse, France

8:50 am 15-3: Discovery and engineering of bacterial lignin degrading enzymes R. Singh*, J.W. Round and L.D. Eltis, The University of

British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; A. Goudarzi and S.

Straus, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver

9:15 am Break

9:45 am 15-4: Development of a versatile multicomponent glycoside hydrolase mixture from thermophilic bacteria for high temperature biomass saccharification S. Singer*, J. Hiras, E. Denzel, J. Kimbrel and S.

Campen, Joint BioEnergy Institute, Emeryville, CA; B.

Simmons, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia National

Laboratories, Emeryville, CA; J.M. Gladden, Sandia

National Labs, Livermore, CA; F. Tachea, Advanced

Biofuels Process Demonstration Unit, Emeryville,

CA; T. Pray, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,

Berkeley, CA; J. Magnuson, Pacific Northwest National

Laboratory, Richland, WA

10:10 am 15-5: Enhanced xyloglucan-specific endo-β-1,4-glucanase efficiency in an engineered CBM44-XegA chimera R.J. Ward*, FFCLRP-USP, Ribeirão Preto - SP, Brazil,

Brazil; G. Furtado and L. Ferreira Ribeiro, FMRP-USP;

C.R. Santos and M.T. Murakami, National Center for

Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM), Campinas;

R. Lorizolla Cordeiro, Centro Nacional de Pesquisa em

Energia e Materiais; L.A. Beraldo de Moraes, FFCLRP-

USP; A.R.L. Damásio, The Brazilian Bioethanol Science

and Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil;

M.D.L.T.D.M. Polizeli, Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências

e Letras de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São

Paulo (USP), Ribeirão Preto, Brazil; M.R. Lourenzoni,

Fundação Oswaldo Cruz - Fiocruz-CE

10:35 am 15-6: Optimisation of a dedicated cellulolytic enzymatic cocktail using on site available raw materials F. Ben Chaabane*, E. Jourdier and F. Monot, IFP

Energies nouvelles, Rueil-Malmaison, France; A.

Margeot, IFP Energies nouvelles, Rueil Malmaison

11:00 am 15-7: Improved beta-glucosidase enzymes for increased biomass saccharification L. Sun*, S. Gladen and E. Cambareri, Edeniq, Inc.,

Visalia, CA

11:30 am–1:00 pm Lunch on your own

session 16: microbial science and Technology iii: fungi, algae, and Consortia Chairs: S . Yang, NREL, Golden, CO and M . Bettiga, Chalmers

University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden

� Aventine Ballroom G, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 16-1: Genomics and regulation of fungal enzyme secretion S.E. Baker*, Joint BioEnergy Institute, PNNL,

Richland, WA, K. McCluskey, Kansas State University,

Manhattan, KS, B.A. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy

Institute, Emeryville, CA, J. Lynn, Joint BioEnergy

Institute, PNNL, Emeryville, CA, J.M. Gladden, Sandia

National Labs, Livermore, CA and J.K. Magnuson,

Joint BioEnergy Institute, Pacific Northwest National

Laboratory, Richland, WA

1:25 pm 16-2: Metagenomics and metaproteomics of lignocellulose transformation by enriched microbiomes from cow rumen and termite gut G. Hernandez-Raquet*, A. Lazuka and L. Auer, INRA,

UMR792, Ingénierie des Systèmes Biologiques et des

Procédés, F-31400 Toulouse, France, Toulouse; N.

Jehmlich and M. von Bergen, Helmholtz Centre for

Environmental Research, Leipzig; M. O’Donohue,

INRA, LISBP, 135 Avenue de Rangueil, F-31077

Toulouse, France, Toulouse, France

1:50 pm 16-3: Fungi as production platforms for organic acids L. Ruohonen*, O. Koivistoinen, J. Kuivanen, Y. Nygård,

M. Andberg, K. Koivuranta, M. Ilmén, M. Oja, D.

Mojzita, A. Koivula, M. Toivari, M.G. Wiebe and M.

Penttilä, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,

Espoo, Finland; P. Richard, VTT Technical Research

Centre of Finland Ltd, Espoo, Finland

Page 28: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

28

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Thursday, april 30

2:15 pm Break

2:45 pm 16-4: Metabolic engineering for itaconic acid production M. Sauer*, CD Laboratory for Biotechnology of

Glycerol, Vienna, M. Steiger, Austrian Center of

Industrial Biotechnology, Vienna and D. Mattanovich,

BOKU - University of Natural Resources and Life

Sciences, Vienna, Austria

3:10 pm 16-5: Using genetic engineering to increase production of phycocyanin, a blue pigment in cyanobacteria R. Takeuchi*, M. McCormick and J. Roberts, Matrix

Genetics, Seattle, WA

3:35 pm 16-6: Cofactor symbiosis enhances growth and biofuel production in Chlorella B.T. Higgins*, O. Fiehn and J.S. VanderGheynst,

University of California, Davis, Davis, CA; T. Kind,

Univesity of California, Davis, Davis, CA

4:00 pm 16-7: Reconstruction of expression regulation network (REXRN) for improving the cellulase production and enzyme system composition of Penicillium oxalicum Z. Li and Y. Qu*, State Key Laboratory of Microbial

Technology, Shandong University, Jinan, China; G.

Yao, L. Gao and R. Wu, Shandong University, Jinan

session 17: renewable fuels, Chemicals, and bio-based products iV: Commercialization and economics Chairs: J . Evans, FlatIrons Cellulosic LLC, Superior, CO and B .

Emme, ICM Inc ., St . Joseph, MO

� Aventine Ballroom DEF, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 17-1: ICM’s line of sight to cellulosic ethanol C. Gerken, L. Malburg, J. Spooner and B. Emme, ICM

inc., St. Joseph, MO; J.E. Javers* and R. Hoefling, ICM,

Inc, St. Joseph, MO; R. Brunner, ICM inc., st. joseph, MO

1:25 pm 17-2: Optimizing enzyme cocktails and process conditions for production of cellulosic ethanol H. Pel*, DSM Biotechnology Center, Delft, Netherlands

1:50 pm 17-3: Techno-economic evaluation of integrated cellulose and starch-based ethanol production from wheat straw and wheat meal E. Joelsson*, O. Wallberg and M. Galbe, Lund

University, Lund, Sweden; B. Erdei, Lund University,

Lund

2:15 pm Break

2:45 pm 17-4: Production of sustainable fuels and chemicals from waste gas streams R. Jensen*, LanzaTech, Skokie, IL

3:10 pm 17-5: Amyris synthetic biology: purposeful, predictable, profitable J. Cherry*, Amyris Inc., Emeryville, CA

3:35 pm 17-6: Rapid commercialization using an integrated approach to bioprocess development M. Japs*, Genomatica, Inc., San Diego, CA

4:00 pm 17-7: Comparative technical, economic and environmental assessment of biomass-to-ethanol conversion technologies: biochemical and thermochemical routes integrated in a sugarcane biorefinery R. Silva*, R. Neves, M. Rezende, T.L. Junqueira, O.

Cavalett, M.D.B. Watanabe and A. Bonomi, Brazilian

Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory

(CTBE), Campinas, SP, Brazil; E.O. Goméz, Brazilian

Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory

(CTBE), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil; R. Maciel Filho,

School of Chemical Engineering, University of

Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil

session 18: bioprocessing, reactor Design, and separations Technology ii Chairs: R . Dasari, Myriant, Woburn, MA and R . Bura, University

of Washington, Seattle, WA

� Vicino Ballroom, Ballroom Level

1:00 pm 18-1: Continuous enzymatic hydrolysis of biomass in a membrane reactor R. Wickramasinghe*, X. Qian and M. Malmali,

University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR; J.J. Stickel,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

Page 29: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

29

Technical Program

SymPoSium on BioTechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Thur

sday

, apr

il 30

1:25 pm 18-2: Understanding high-solids enzymatic liquefaction and hydrolysis kinetics of biomass via in situ MRI rheological measurements M.J. Cardona*, N. Karuna, T. Jeoh, R.L. Powell and M.J.

McCarthy, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA;

E.J. Tozzi, Aspect Imaging, Davis, CA

1:50 pm 18-3: Application of the direct quadrature method of moments for the modelling of the enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulosic substrates N. Lebaz*, Toulouse White Biotechnology, Toulouse,

France; J. Morchain, A. Cockx and M. Spérandio,

Université de Toulouse; INSA, UPS, INP; LISBP, Toulouse,

France

2:15 pm Break

2:45 pm 18-4: Predictive scale up in mini and micro bioreactors screening D.G. Mou*, Moubio Knowledge Co., Taipei, Taiwan

3:10 pm 18-5: Rapid bio-methanation of syngas: efficiency of a reverse membrane bioreactor (RMBR) in a semi-continuous fermentation process S. Youngsukkasem* and K. Chandolias, University of

Borås, Borås, Sweden; M.J. Taherzadeh, University of

Borås, Boras, Sweden, Sweden

3:35 pm 18-6: Process intensification (PI) of CO consumption by C. ljungdahlii in a low power input biocomposite gas absorber M.J. Schulte* and M.C. Flickinger, North Carolina State

University, Raleigh, NC

4:00 pm 18-7: From wheat straw to bioethanol: integrative analysis of a separate hydrolysis and co-fermentation process with implemented enzyme production V. Novy*, Graz University of Technology, Graz and B.

Nidetzky, Graz University of Technology, Graz, Austria

pre-banquet receptionSponsored by Vogelbusch GmbH

6:00–7:00 pm � Poolside West, Ballroom Level

banquet, awards, and banquet addressSponsored by Novozymes

7:00–9:30 pm � Aventine Ballroom, Ballroom Level

Guest speaker: Stuart Sandin, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla CA

“Sharks, snappers, and corals: How the remote Pacific ocean offers optimism about the future of coral reefs”

Page 30: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

30

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

posTer session 1: bioprocessing, reactor Design, and separations Technology; enzyme science and Technology; feedstocks; pretreatment and fractionation6:00–9:00 pm

� Aventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

M1 Conditioning of pretreated substrates for more efficient bioconversion F. Zimbardi*, E. Viola, G. Arcieri and V. Valerio, Italian

National Agency for New Technologies, Energy

and Sustainable Economic Development - ENEA,

Rotondella, Italy

M2 Characterization and detoxification of enzyme hydrolysates derived from dilute ammonia pretreated sorghum and energycane bagasse for syrup production P.J. Pham-Bugayong* and G. Aita, Louisiana State

University AgCenter, St. Gabriel, LA

M3 Synergistic effect of peroxidase and nonionic surfactant to improve enzymatic hydrolysis of corn stover J. Liu*, H. Xu, T. Green and K. Rane, Novozymes North

America, Franklinton, NC; Y. Chen, Novozymes North

America, Franklinton

M4 A discussion of realistic feedstocks: can we use the entire poplar tree for biofuels and biochemicals production? C. Dou* and R. Bura, University of Washington,

Seattle, WA

M5 Suitability of oxygen delignification to increase enzymatic digestibility of polysaccharides in sugar cane bagasse O. Uyarte*, University of São Paulo, Brazil, Lorena

and A. Ferraz, Escola de Engenharia de Lorena - USP,

Lorena, Brazil

M6 Understanding mechanisms responsible for strong cellulase inhibition by mannans R. Kumar*, Department of Chemical and

Environmental Engineering, Center for Environmental

Research and Technology, Bourns College of

Engineering, University of California Riverside,

and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Riverside, CA and C.E. Wyman, Center

for Environmental Research and Technology, Bourns

College of Engineering, University of California

Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Riverside, CA

M7 Determination of carbohydrates in acid hydrolysates of wood J. Rohrer* and L. Basumallick, Thermo Fisher Scientific,

Sunnyvale, CA

M8 Production of lignin with a low molecular weight from kraft black liquor J. Olsson*, O. Wallberg, A. Arkell and B. Al-Rudainy,

Lund University, Lund, Sweden

M9 Microbial oil production from dilute acid hydrolysis and enzymatic saccharification of spent coffee ground at high solids condition C.H. Huang*, Y.S. Cheng, T.H. Chou and L.H. Yeh,

National Yunlin University of Science and Technology,

Yunlin

M10 Evaluation of ozonolysis in acid and alkaline conditions as pretreatment of sugarcane bagasse S. Bordignon, M. Laranja and E. Gomes, IBILCE -

UNESP, Sao Jose do Rio Preto, Brazil; R. Da-Silva* and

M. Boscolo, IBILCE - UNESP, Sao Jose do Rio Preto;

M. Ladisch and E. Ximenes, Purdue University, West

Lafayette, IN

M11 Enhanced productivity and very high gravity fermentation of glucose and steam exploded corn stover using poultry litter biochar O. Diallo and F. Agblevor*, Utah State University,

Logan, UT

M12 Evaluation of sugar derivatives separation in the liquid hydrolyzate after dilute acid pretreatment using Quercus mongolica S.K. Jang*, H.S. Jeong, C.Y. Hong, S.Y. Park and I.G.

Choi, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea

Page 31: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

31

Poster sessions

Mon

day,

Apr

il 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M13 Pilot scale alkaline pretreatment in a 1 ton/day continuous, horizontal pretreatment reactor E.M. Kuhn* and D.J. Schell, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; M. O’Brien, NREL,

Golden, CO

M14 A comparison of batch-wise vs . continuous steam pretreatment of lignocellulosic materials M. Galbe*, C. Roslander, F. Vrgoc and O. Wallberg,

Lund University, Lund, Sweden

M15 Effects of extractive ammonia pretreatment on the ultrastructure and glycan composition of plant cell walls U. Avci*, S. Pattathil and M.G. Hahn, University of

Georgia, Athens, GA; L.D.C. Sousa, V. Balan and B.

Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center,

Lansing, MI

M16 On the reliability of cellulose hydrolysis models based on the extension of Michaelis-Menten type kinetics N. Lebaz*, Toulouse White Biotechnology, Toulouse,

France; J. Morchain, A. Cockx and M. Spérandio,

Université de Toulouse; INSA, UPS, INP; LISBP, Toulouse,

France

M17 Barley straw as feedstock to produce bioproducts: evaluation of acid hydrolysis process E.D.J.C. Moraes, Engineering School of Lorena,

University of São Paulo, Lorena, Brazil; D.D.V. Silva*,

K.J. Dussán, M.D.G.A. Felipe and J.B. Almeida e Silva,

Engineering School of Lorena - University of São

Paulo, Lorena, Brazil

M18 Evaluation of acid hydrolysis conditions to obtain fermentable sugars from alkali pretreated rice straw I.S. Ferreira*, R.C.A. Castro and I.C. Roberto, Escola

de Engenharia de Lorena, Universidade de São

Paulo, Lorena, Brazil; B.G. Fonseca, H.T.L. Santos,

A.M.M. Maia and M.S. Mendonça, Departamento

de Biotecnologia, Escola de Engenharia de Lorena,

Universidade de São Paulo, Lorena, Brazil

M19 Improved enzymatic saccharification of corn stover using low moisture anhydrous ammonia (LMAA) pretreatment at moderate temperatures R.D. Cayetano, H. Pham Thi Thu and P.V. Truong

Nguyen, Kongju National University, Cheonan,

Chungnam; J.S. Kim, Kyonggi University, Suwon,

Gyonggi-do; K.K. Oh, Dankook University, Cheonan,

South Korea; T.H. Kim*, Kongju National University,

Cheonan, South Korea

M20 Accessory enzymes play a key role in reducing the protein loading required to achieve effective hydrolysis of pretreated biomass J. Hu*, S. Van Dyk, R.P. Chandra, K. Gourlay and J.N.

Saddler, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC;

V. Arantes, University of São Paulo, Lorena School of

Engineering, Sao Paulo, Brazil

M21 Depolymerization of lignocellulosic biomass during peracetic acid delignification K.Y. Kang* and M.J. Jeong, Dongguk University-Seoul,

Seoul; A. Potthast, BOKU - University of Natural

Resources and Life Sciences, Tulln

M22 Optimization of processing conditions for dilute acid and alkaline pretreatment of agave bagasse at high solids loading by response surface methodology A.I. Avila-Lara, J.N. Camberos-Flores and J.A. Perez-

Pimienta*, Autonomous University of Nayarit, Tepic,

Mexico

M23 Optimization of liquid ammonia pretreatment conditions for maximizing glucose yield of energycane using response surface methodology S. Oladi* and G. Aita, Audubon Sugar Institute, St

Gabriel, LA

M25 Effect of shear in a steam explosion reactor on pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis yields of dilute-acid pretreated corn stover J. Shekiro*, X. Chen, M. O’Brien, E.M. Kuhn and M.P.

Tucker, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

Page 32: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

32

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M26 Kinetic modeling of THF co-solvent enhanced production of furfural, HMF, and levulinic acid N. Nagane*, University of California, Riverside,

Riverside, CA; C. Cai and R. Kumar, University of

California, Riverside and BioEnergy Science Center

(BESC), Riverside, CA; C.E. Wyman, Center for

Environmental Research and Technology, Bourns

College of Engineering, University of California

Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Riverside, CA

M27 Base-catalyzed depolymerization of residual lignin-enriched biomass from biochemical conversion processes R. Katahira*, A. Mittal, K. McKinney and G.T. Beckham,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

M28 Tissue specific fractionation, extraction and characterization of energy sorghum and the development of a counter-current extraction and alkaline pretreatment for high-titer mixed sugar production M. Li, D. Williams, J. Crowe and D.B. Hodge*, Michigan

State University, East Lansing, MI

M29 Impact of moisture content on the storage performance of corn stover biomass I.J. Bonner, L.M. Wendt* and W.A. Smith, Idaho

National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID

M30 Comparison of sugar release by hydrolysis with fungal enzymes vs consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) with Clostridium

thermocellum from solids produced by dilute acid and hydrothermal pretreatments of switchgrass N. Kothari*, V.A. Thomas, R. Kumar and C.E. Wyman,

Department of Chemical and Environmental

Engineering, Center for Environmental Research and

Technology, Bourns College of Engineering, University

of California Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Riverside, CA

M31 Hydrothermal pretreatment of date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L .) residues to improve enzymatic convertability and ethanol production C. Fang*, J.E. Schmidt, I. Cybulska, G. Brudecki and

M.H. Thomsen, Masdar Institute of Science and

Technology, Abu Dhabi, UAE; C. Frankær, Technical

University of Denmark

M32 Using structural analysis to investigate physicochemical properties that dictate enzyme functionality D.W. Sammond*, Y.J. Bomble, J. Yarbrough, S.E.

Hobdey, S.R. Decker, L.E. Taylor, M. Resch, M.E.

Himmel and M. Crowley, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO; E. Mansfield, National

Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO; J.

Bozell, University of Tennessee; N. Kastelowitz and H.

Yin, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO

M33 Evaluation of autohydrolysis pretreatment using microwave heating for enzymatic saccharification of corn residues A. Aguilar, C. Aguilar and H.A. Ruiz*, Autonomous

University of Coahuila, Saltillo, Mexico; A. Romaní,

University of Minho, Braga, Portugal; G. Garrote,

University of Vigo, Ourense, Spain

M34 Effect of liquid hot water pretreatment on enzyme loading and hydrolysis of hardwood M.R. Ladisch*, Y. Kim, J.K. Ko and E. Ximenes, Purdue

University, West Lafayette, IN; T. Kreke, Laboratory of

Renewable Resources Engineering, Purdue University,

West Lafayette, IN

M35 Techno-economic analysis for recovery of fermentation inhibitors: comparison of conventional bioseparation methods M. Aghazadeh* and A.S. Engelberth, Purdue

University, West Lafayette, IN

M36 Acetic acid-assisted hydrothermal fractionation of empty fruit bunches for recovery of hemicellulosic sugar D.Y. Kim, H.J. Ryu and K.K. Oh*, Dankook University,

Cheonan, South Korea; T.H. Kim, Kongju National

University, Cheonan, South Korea; J.J. Yoon, Korea

Institute of Industrial Technology, Cheonan, South

Korea

M37 Development of a high temperature biological process for efficient butanol production D.W. Reed*, D.L. Daubaras and V.S. Thompson, Idaho

National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID; T. Feldman and

K.L. Sale, Joint BioEnergy Institute, Emeryville, CA;

A.A.N. Saqib, Green Biologics Ltd., Abingdon, United

Kingdom; E.T. Davies, Green Biologics Ltd., Abingdon

Page 33: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

33

Poster sessions

Mon

day,

Apr

il 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M38 Optimizing acid-catalyzed steam explosion to enhance enzymatic hydrolysis of Populus euramericana by response surface methodology J.Y. Jung*, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju,

South Korea; J.S. Kim, S.Y. Ha, J.B. Nam and J.K. Yang,

Gyeongsang National University, Gyeongsangnam-

do, South Korea; M.S. Choi, 2Division of Environmental

Forest Science, Institute of Agriculture & Life Sciences,

Gyeongsang National University

M39 Analysis of by-product formation and sugar monomerization in sugarcane bagasse pretreated at pilot plant scale: differences between autohydrolysis, alkaline and acid pretreatment E. van der Pol*, Wageningen University and Research

Centre, Wageningen; R. Bakker, A. van Zeeland and G.

Eggink, Wageningen University and Research Centre

M40 Mass balance evaluation of different detoxification methods for the sugarcane bagasse hemicellulose hydrolysate T. Villela, K.J. Dussán*, D.D.V. Silva, S.S. da Silva and

M.D.G.A. Felipe, Engineering School of Lorena -

University of São Paulo, Lorena, Brazil

M41 Benchmarking advances in pretreatment technology by performing bench-scale integrated enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation R. Nelson*, E. Jennings, X. Chen, E.M. Kuhn, M. O’Brien

and N. Dowe, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

M42 Blending municipal solid waste with corn stover for sugar production using ionic liquid process N. Sun* and N. Sathitsuksanoh, Joint BioEnergy

Institute, Emeryville, CA; F. Xu, Joint BioEnergy

Institute/ Sandia National Lab, Emeryville, CA;

V.S. Thompson and K. Cafferty, Idaho National

Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID; C. Li, D. Tanjore, A. Narani

and T. Pray, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,

Berkeley, CA; B. Simmons and S. Singh, Joint BioEnergy

Institute / Sandia National Laboratories, Emeryville,

CA

M43 Optimization of a one-step biochemical conversion of California Agave spp . to bioethanol M.L. Lu* and C.E. Wyman, Bourns College of

Engineering, University of California, Riverside,

Riverside, CA

M44 Rapid “on the field” analysis of sorghum biomass composition K. Rao*, T. Hopkins, A. Polston and R. Schneeberger,

Nexsteppe Inc, South San Francisco, CA; D. Borden

and M. Klepac, Nexsteppe Inc, Hereford, TX

M45 Analytical variability of biomass solids compositional analysis D. Templeton, J. Sluiter, C. Payne, A. Sluiter* and E.

Wolfrum, National Renewable Energy Lab, Golden, CO

M46 Remediation of ethanol fermentation recycle water stream using biologically charged exchange column C. Cruz*, Archer Daniels Midland Company, Decatur,

IL

M47 Production of fuel ethanol with diluted phosphoric acid steam explosion pretreated sweet sorghum I.U. Nieves, V. Rondon, W.J. Sagues, M.T. Fernández

and I. Kataeva, University of Florida, Perry, FL; E.

Castro*, University of Jaen, Jaen, Spain; L.O. Ingram,

University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

M48 Comparison of extracellular protein complexes formed by high and low level cellulase producing Trichoderma reesei M. Wang* and X. Fang, Shandong Univesity, Jinan,

China; L. Han, Shandong University, Jinan

M49 Insight to factors limiting enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose-rich substrates L. Olsson* and A. Peciulyte, Chalmers University of

Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden; T. Larsson and K.

Karlström, Innventia AB, 11486 Stockholm, Sweden;

A. Enejder and J. Kiskis, Chalmers University of

Technology

M50 Investigation of various pretreatments on recalcitrance of natural poplar variants H. Yang and A. Ragauskas, The University of

Tennessee-Knoxville, Knoxville, TN; Y. Pu*, M.

Wellington, T. Tschaplinski and G. Tuskan, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN

Page 34: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

34

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M51 Comparative fermentation of Saccharomyces

cerevisiae and Zymomonas mobilis in lignocellulosic hydrolysates produced from corn stover and switchgrass to study microbial responses to different feedstock hydrolysates Y. Zhang*, J. Serate, D. Xie, E. Pohlmann, G. Sanford,

D. Eilert and D. Bates, Great Lakes Bioenergy Research

Center, Madison, WI; R.G. Ong, Michigan State

University, DOE Great Lakes Bioenegy Research Center,

Lansing, MI; J. Piotrowski, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Madison, WI; D. Cavalier, Michigan

State University, East Lansing, MI

M52 Understanding sugar yield loss and enzyme inhibition due to oligosaccharides accumulation during high solids-loading enzymatic hydrolysis S. Xue, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

(GLBRC), East Lansing, MI; N. Uppugundla, S.P.S.

Chundawat and B.E. Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Michigan State University, Lansing,

MI; M.J. Bowman, United States Department of

Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, National

Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria,

IL; M. Jin and V. Balan*, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Lansing, MI; L. da Costa Sousa,

Michigan State University and University of Pune,

Lansing, MI; B. Fox, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Madison, WI; D. Cavalier, Michigan

State University, East Lansing, MI

M53 Integrated biofuel production from fruit of Calophyllum inophyllum based on a concept of biorefinery J.H. Wu*, Y.S. Cheng, T.H. Chou and L.H. Yeh, National

Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Yunlin

M54 Improving corn ethanol production using enzymes produced by solid-state fermentation A. Guillaume*, Ets J. Soufflet, Nogent-sur-Seine, France

M55 Ethanol fermentation from industrial potato waste in biofilm reactors G. Izmirlioglu* and A. Demirci, The Pennsylvania State

University, University Park, PA

M56 Enzyme optimization and fermentation of high solids loading AFEX pretreated agave residues for ethanol production C.A. Flores-Gómez* and E. Escamilla, Instituto

Tecnológico de Celaya, México.; C. Gunawan, V. Balan

and B.E. Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research

Center, Michigan State University, Lansing, MI

M57 Conversion performance of blended and constituent corn stover and switchgrass using dilute-acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis D. Stevens*, A. Ray, A. Hoover, D.L. Daubaras, K.

Cafferty and K. Schaller, Idaho National Laboratory,

Idaho Falls, ID; N.J. Nagle, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO

M58 Cellobiohydrolase and endoglucanase respond differently to surfactants during the hydrolysis of cellulose C.W.C. Hsieh, D. Cannella, C. Felby* and L.G. Thygesen,

University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark;

H. Jørgensen, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs.

Lyngby

M59 The effect of lignin S/G ratio on consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) fermentation performance A. Dumitrache*, H. Akinosho, M. Rodriguez Jr., A.

Ragauskas, B.H. Davison and S.D. Brown, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; R. Sykes, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

M60 GH53 endo-beta-1,4 galactanase of Bacillus

licheniformis: biochemical characterization applied to biomass degradation C. Botelho Machado*, L.M. Zanphorlin and R.

Ruller, National Center for Research in Energy and

Materials (CNPEM), Campinas, Brazil; E. Antônio

de Lima and H. Harumi Sato, State University of

Campinas, Campinas, Brazil; R. John Ward, Faculdade

de Filosofia, Ciencias e Letras de Ribeirão Preto,

Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil

M61 Biomass fractionation methods for ash removal: sieving, anatomical, and air classification J.A. Lacey*, J. Aston, K. Delezene-Briggs, T. Westover

and D.N. Thompson, Idaho National Laboratory,

Idaho Falls, ID

Page 35: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

35

Poster sessions

Mon

day,

Apr

il 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M62 Biochemical and biophysical description of a novel glycoside hydrolase family 6 from sugarcane soil metagenome T.A. Gonçalves*, T.M. Alvarez, J.P. Franco Cairo and

D.A.A. Paixão, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil; A.V.

Monclaro and M.V. Liberato, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory (CTBE); F.M.

Squina, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology

Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas

M63 Kinetic study of ethanol fermentation from sugarcane bagasse enzymatic hydrolyzate concentrated with molasses W.E. Herrera*, University of Campinas, Campinas;

E.A. Ccopa Rivera, C.K. Yamakawa and V. Coelho

Geraldo, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology

Laboratory - Brazilian Center for Research in Energy

and Materials (CTBE/CNPEM), Campinas, SP, Brazil;

L. Plazas Tovar, School of Chemical Engineering,

University of Campinas - Unicamp, Campinas, Brazil;

C.E. Vaz Rossell, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory - Brazilian Center for Research

in Energy and Materials (CTBE/CNPEM), Campinas,

Brazil; A. Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, SP, Brazil;

R. Maciel Filho, School of Chemical Engineering,

University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, SP,

Brazil, Brazil

M64 Investigation of the enzymatic hydrolysis of torrefied biomass samples E. Rajnai*, Z. Czégény, Z. Sebestyén, E. Jakab and J.

Bozi, Research Centre For Natural Sciences (HAS),

Budapest; Z. Barta, Budapest University of Technology

and Economics, Budapest

M65 Preliminary detoxification of dilute ammonia pretreated energycane enzymatic hydrolysate by activated charcoal for syrup production F. Deng*, Louisiana State University Agriculture Center,

Saint Gabriel, LA, P.J. Pham-Bugayong, Louisiana

State University AgCenter, St. Gabriel, LA and G. Aita,

Audubon Sugar Institute, St Gabriel, LA

M66 New assay for lignin depolymerization based on lignin films M. Kent*, N. Sathitsuksanoh, K.L. Sale and B. Simmons,

Joint BioEnergy Institute, Emeryville, CA; I. Avina, N.

Rader, J.A. Timlin, R. Polsky and B. Ricken, Sandia

National Laboratories

M67 Structural insights into the inhibition of cellobiohydrolases by xylo-oligosaccharides H. Hansson*, M.H. Momeni, J. Ståhlberg and M.

Sandgren, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,

Uppsala, Sweden; W. Ubhayasekera, Uppsala

University, Uppsala, Sweden

M68 Impact of drought on composition and sugar yields from dilute-acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis of Miscanthus, mixed perennial grasses, and switchgrass A. Hoover*, R. Emerson, A. Ray, D. Stevens, J. Lacey

and M. Cortez, Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho

Falls, ID; C. Payne, National Renewable Energy Lab,

Golden, CO; R. Kallenbach, University of Missouri;

M. Sousek, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; R. Farris,

Oklahoma State University

M69 Sulfuric acid hydrolysis and detoxification of red alga Pterocladiella capillacea for bioethanol fermentation with thermotolerant yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus J. Yang*, School of Life Science & Biotechnology

for BK21 Plus, Department of Biotechnology, Korea

University, Seoul and K.H. Kim, Korea University

Graduate School, Seoul, South Korea

M70 Evaluation of the effect of mixed agricultural feedstocks on pretreatment, hydrolysis and co-fermentation efficacy F. Nielsen*, F. Vrgoc, M. Galbe and O. Wallberg, Lund

University, Lund, Sweden

M71 Solution structures of glycosylated family 1 carbohydrate binding modules R. Happs*, M. Resch, M. Davis, G.T. Beckham and M.

Crowley, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO; L. Chen, University of Colorado; Z. Tan,

University of Colorado, Boulder, CO

M72 Dilute-acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis of corn stover, switchgrass, Miscanthus, and paper blends A.E. Ray*, D. Stevens, L.M. Wendt, D.L. Daubaras, K.

Cafferty and H. Silverman, Idaho National Laboratory,

Idaho Falls, ID; G. Sowell, Montana State University,

Bozeman, MT; N.J. Nagle, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO

Page 36: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

36

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M73 The inhibitory effects of soluble compounds derived from steam pretreated biomass on the hydrolytic potential of commercial enzyme cocktails R. Zhai*, J. Hu and J.N. Saddler, University of British

Columbia, Vancouver, BC; V. Arantes, University of Sao

Paulo, Lorena School of Engineering, Lorena

M74 Breaking oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by yeast G. Furtado, C. Picone and R. Lopes da Cunha,

University of Campinas, Campinas, Brazil; M.C.

Cuellar*, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The

Netherlands

M75 Micro-spectroscopic imaging of lignin-carbohydrate complexes in plant cell walls and their migration during biomass pretreatment Y. Zeng*, S. Zhao, H. Wei, M.P. Tucker, D.K. Johnson,

M.E. Himmel and S.Y. Ding, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; N. Mosier and R.

Meilan, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

M76 Effect of pelletizing herbaceous grasses on chemical composition and conversion properties B.S. Dien*, National Center for Agricultural Utilization

Research, USDA-ARS, Peoria, IL, R.B. Mitchell, USDA-

ARS, Lincoln, NE, A.A. Boateng, USDA-ARS, Eastern

Regional Research Center, Wyndmoor, PA, M.J.

Bowman, United States Department of Agriculture,

Agricultural Research Service, National Center for

Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria, IL, M.A.

Cotta, USDA-ARS, Peoria, IL, M. Serapiglia, ERRC-ARS-

USDA, Wyndmoor, PA and V. Singh, University of

Illinois, Urbana, IL

M77 Using isolated cell wall xylan to identify recalcitrant oligosaccharides M.J. Bowman*, United States Department of

Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, National

Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria, IL,

B.S. Dien, National Center for Agricultural Utilization

Research, USDA-ARS, Peoria, IL and J.A. Mertens,

USDA-ARS, Peoria, IL

M78 Gas stripping technique applied to Brazilian raw material: diluted sugarcane molasses G. Ponce, J. Miranda and J. Moreira, University of

Campinas, Campinas; R.R.D. Andrade, University

of Campinas, Campinas - SP, Brazil; R. Maciel Filho,

School of Chemical Engineering, University of

Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil;

M.R. Wolf Maciel*, State University of Campinas

(UNICAMP), Campinas, Brazil

M79 Impaired desorption provides a mechanistic link for activity loss during enzymatic hydrolysis of biomass Z. Ye and E. Berson*, University of Louisville, Louisville,

KY

M80 Smart peptides: immobilization of hyperthermophilic enzymes on mineral matrices for biomass degradation P. Bergquist*, A. Care and A. Sunna, Macquarie

University, North Ryde, Sydney

M81 The enzymatic hydrolysis of pretreated pulp fibers predominantly involves “peeling/erosion” modes of action V. Arantes*, University of São Paulo, Lorena School

of Engineering, Sao Paulo, Brazil; K. Gourlay and J.N.

Saddler, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC

M82 Binding profile of cellulolytic enzymes to steam-pretreated and alkali-pretreated sugarcane bagasse lignins G. Siqueira and A.A.M.F. Milagres*, Engineering

School of Lorena, University of São Paulo, Lorena,

Brazil

M83 Advancements towards the production of biofuels from loblolly pine: Increases in terpenoid content and development of innovative and high-throughput extractions and analysis of terpenoids A. Ware*, R. Sykes and M. Davis, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; G. Papa, Lawrence

Berkeley National Laboratory; J. Kirby, University

of California Berkeley; B. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy

Institute / Sandia National Laboratories, Emeryville,

CA; G. Peter, University of Florida

Page 37: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

37

Poster sessions

Mon

day,

Apr

il 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M84 Energy cane as an alternative for first and second generation ethanol production in Brazil M.F. Chagas, O. Cavalett, C.D.F. Jesus, T.L. Junqueira,

J.L.N. Carvalho, V.L.R. Gouvêia and A. Bonomi*,

Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology

Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil; R.M. Filho,

School of Chemical Engineering, State University of

Campinas, Campinas, Brazil

M85 Repeated aspartate tags improve functional expression of Candida antarctica lipase B in recombinant Escherichia coli S.K. Kim, W.K. Min, U. Heo* and J.H. Seo, Seoul

National University, Seoul; Y.C. Park, H.H. Lee and S.T.

Jeon, Kookmin University, Seoul

M86 Structural studies of beta-galactosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidium, a hydrolase from GH family 42 A. Godoy*, C. Camilo and I. Polikarpov, Universidade

de Sao Paulo, Sao Carlos, Brazil

M87 Measuring productive and non-productive binding of Trichoderma reesei Cel7A on cellulose N. Karuna* and T. Jeoh, University of California, Davis,

Davis, CA

M88 Physical and chemical characterization of Moringa oleifera Lam seed from Brazil during two years in storage under refrigeration G. Madrona*, M. Scapim, J. Antigo and R.

Bergamasco, State University of Maringa, Maringá; M.

Reis, Federal University of Uberlandia, Uberlândia

M89 Role of carbohydrate-binding module of fungal GH10 xylanase in synergistic hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass H. Inoue*, S. Kishishita, A. Kumagai, M. Kataoka, T.

Fujii and K. Ishikawa, National Institute of Advanced

Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Higashi-

Hiroshima, Japan

M90 Structural characterization of a β-xylosidase-like enzyme from Bacillus licheniformis L.M. Zanphorlin*, National Center for Research in

Energy and Materials (CNPEM), Campinas, Brazil;

J.A. Diogo, M.T. Murakami and R. Ruller, National

Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM),

Campinas

M91 Evaluating winter rye silage as a feedstock for lignocellulosic ethanol D. Bruce, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI;

V. Balan and A. Orjuela*, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Lansing, MI; T. Richard, The

Pennsylvania State University, PA

M92 Microbial lignocellulolytic secretome analysis using metatranscriptomics and proteomics techniques for enzyme discovery B.L. Mello* and I. Polikarpov, São Paulo University,

São Carlos, Brazil; A.M. Alessi, S. Bird, J.P.W. Young,

S.J. McQueen Mason and N.C. Bruce, University of

York, York, United Kingdom; D.M. Riaño-Pachón,

Centro Nacional de Pesquisa em Energia e Materiais

(CNPEM), Campinas, Brazil

M93 Continuous steady state and fed-batch dynamic simulation of fermentation process in an ethanol distillery A.J.G. Cruz* and C.B.B. Costa, Universidade Federal de

São Carlos (UFSCar), São Carlos, Brazil; G.C. Fonseca,

Chemical Engineering Graduate Program/Federal

University of São Carlos, São Carlos

M94 Production of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) from waste: product recovery, techno-economic and ex-ante environmental assessment Y. Jiang, L.A.M. van der Wielen, R. Kleerebezem and

M.C. Cuellar*, Delft University of Technology, Delft,

The Netherlands; C. Fernandez Dacosta, J.A. Posada

and A. Ramirez, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The

Netherlands; G. Mikova, Polymer Technology Group

Eindhoven BV, Eindhoven, The Netherlands

M95 A novel bacterial mannanase from Streptomyces tendae: purification, characterization and application to hydrolysis of spent coffee ground H.Y. Yoo*, J.H. Lee, X. Yang, S.K. Lee, J.H. Lee and S.W.

Kim, Korea University, Seoul, Korea; S.S. Cho, Mokpo

National University, Muan, Korea; J.C. Yoo, Chosun

University, Gwangju, Korea

M96 Structural and functional studies of carbohydrate-active enzymes involved in the degradation of plant biomass with potential biotechnological applications M. Lima, A. Bernardes, I. Polikarpov and J. Muniz*,

Universidade de Sao Paulo, Sao Carlos, Brazil

Page 38: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

38

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M97 Application of enzymatic esterification under high pressure CO

2 condition for in

situ recovery of butyric acid from anaerobic fermentor J. Chun* and T.H. Lee, Hanyang university, Seoul; B.I.

Sang, Hanyang University, Seoul, South Korea

M98 Structural analysis of peroxidase from the palm tree Chamaerops excelsa A. Bernardes*, J. Celestino, L. Textor, J. Muniz and

I. Polikarpov, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Sao

Carlos, Brazil; N. Cuadrado, M. Roig and V. Shnyrov,

Universidad de Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain; E.

Kostetsky, Far Eastern Federal University, Vladivostok,

Russia

M99 Development of a chimeric hemicellulase to enhance the xylose production and thermotolerance R. Ruller* and L.M. Zanphorlin, National Center for

Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM), Campinas,

Brazil; J. Diogo, J. Cota, L. Wolf, C. Machado, A.

Damasio, F. Squina and M.T. Murakami, National

Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM),

Campinas; Z. Hoffmam, National Center for Research

in Energy and Materials (CNPEM), Campinas/São

Paulo/Brazil

M100 Hybrid LCA: uncertainties on the sustainability assessment of first and second generation ethanol production M. Watanabe*, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas; M.F.

Chagas, O. Cavalett and A. Bonomi, Brazilian

Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory

(CTBE), Campinas, Brazil

M101 Glycoside hydrolase enhancement activities of Trichoderma harzianum P49P11 for sugarcane pretreated bagasse enzymatic hydrolysis using statistical optimization P.D.S. Costa and D.J.D.S. Lima, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory, Campinas;

J.G.D.C. Pradella*, Brazilian Laboratory of Science

and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas;

P.D.S. Delabona, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas, Brazil,

Campinas, Brazil; A.C.D. Costa, State University of

Campinas, Campinas

M102 Cellulase production by Brazilian Trichoderma spp . for sugarcane bagasse saccharification T.D. Mendes, L.C.D.L. Favaro, D.D.S. Rodrigues, B.F.

Quirino and T.F.C. Salum*, Embrapa Agroenergy,

Brasília, DF, Brazil; A.C.B. de Araújo, Universidade

Católica de Brasília, Brasília, DF, Brazil; I.S. de Melo,

Embrapa Environment, Jaguariuna, SP, Brazil

M103 Measuring productive and non-productive binding of cellobiohydrolase on cellulose by time-resolved, super-resolution single molecule imaging A. Mudinoor* and T. Jeoh, University of California,

Davis, Davis, CA; P.M. Goodwin, Los Alamos National

Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM

M104 Impact of integrated landscapes on bioenergy supply-shed sustainability and feedstock economics I.J. Bonner*, K. Cafferty and J. Koudelka, Idaho

National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID; L.M. Eaton, Oak

Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; G. McNunn

and D. Muth Jr., AgSolver Inc., Ames, IA

M105 Synthesizing cellulose B.C. Knott*, M. Crowley, M. Himmel and G. Beckham,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; J.

Zimmer, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA

M106 The importance of water, climate change, and water policy for potential biorefineries in Washington State A. Mihle*, R. Bura, R. Gustafson, C. Ryan, S. Bolton, E.L.

Budsberg, J.T. Crawford and L. Rogers, University of

Washington, Seattle, WA

M107 Identifying enzymes involved in Clostridium

thermocellum ferredoxin metabolism J. Lo*, D. Olson and L.R. Lynd, Dartmouth College,

Hanover, NH; A.M. Guss, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN

M108 Mechanistic modeling of enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass with detailed structural and morphological considerations A. Nag* and J.J. Stickel, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO; J. Lischeske, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory

Page 39: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

39

Poster sessions

Mon

day,

Apr

il 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M109 Understanding the role of surface chemical properties of cellulose fibrils in productive cellulase binding during hydrolysis A. Mudinoor* and T. Jeoh, University of California,

Davis, Davis, CA

M110 Nanostructure enzyme assemblies for biomass conversion C. Lee*, USDA-ARS, Albany, CA; R. Kibblewhite, P.

Templeton, W. Orts and K. Wagschal, USDA-ARS; C.

Paavola, NASA Ames Research Center

M111 Development of a pyruvate decarboxylase for use in thermophilic bacteria L. Buddrus*, M.J. Danson and D.J. Leak, University of

Bath, Bath, United Kingdom

M112 Comparative secretome analysis of T.

reesei and A. niger using a novel sequential cultivation method for the cellulase production C. Florencio, Embrapa Agricultural Instrumentation,

São Carlos; A.C. Badino, Federal University of Sao

Carlos, Sao Carlos, Brazil; C.S. Farinas*, Brazilian

Agricultural Research Corporation, Embrapa

Instrumentation, São Carlos, Brazil; E. Ximenes and M.

Ladisch, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

M113 Comparison of the enzymatic convertibility of glycerol- and sulfuric acid-pretreated sugarcane bagasse using different cellulase preparations C. Martín Medina*, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden;

P. Volkov and A. Rozhkova, A.N. Bach Institute of

Biochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow,

Russia; J. Puls, Thünen Institute for Wood Research,

Hamburg, Germany; A. Sinitsyn, Lomonosov Moscow

State University, Moscow, Russia

M114 Expression of an auxiliary activity 9 from Chaetomium globosum in a bacterial host and its synergism in cellulose hydrolysis I.J. Kim* and K.H. Kim, Korea University Graduate

School, Seoul, South Korea

M115 Magnetic cross-linked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs) for carrier free immobilization of lignocellulolytic enzymes B.I. Pletschke*, Rhodes University, Grahamstown,

South Africa and A. Bhattacharya, Rhodes University,

Grahamstown

M116 Toward enhanced cellulose biodegradation: Investigating the relationship between cellulose accessibility and crystallinity with a modified Simons’ staining assay Y. Kang, T. Kwok*, M.J. Realff and A.S. Bommarius,

Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA

M117 Optimization of tailor-made enzyme cocktail for deconstruction of agricultural and forest residues A. Karnaouri*, L. Matsakas, M.N. Muraleedharan,

U. Rova and P. Christakopoulos, Luleå University of

Technology, Luleå, Sweden; E. Topakas, National

Technical University of Athens, Athens

M118 The dispute against direct dyes as molecular probes for evaluating enzyme accessible cellulose in lignocellulosic biomass S. Bhagia*, University of California Riverside, Bourns

College of Engineering Center for Environmental

Research & Technology and BioEnergy Science Center,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Riverside, CA; C.E.

Wyman and R. Kumar, Department of Chemical and

Environmental Engineering, Center for Environmental

Research and Technology, Bourns College of

Engineering, University of California Riverside,

and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Riverside, CA

M119 Nitrogen dependence of cellulase and hemicellulase activities in lignocellulose degrading microbial communities D. Harrold*, University of California Davis, Davis, CA

and J. VanderGheynst, University of California, Davis,

Davis, CA

M120 A thermostable β-mannanase from Paenibacillus thiaminolyticus: purification, characterization and its application S. Dhawan*, GGDSD COLLEGE, CHANDIGARH,

INDIA, R. Kaur, GURU NANAK DEV UNIVERSITY,

AMRITSAR, INDIA. and J. Kaur*, PANJAB UNIVERSITY,

CHANDIGARH, INDIA.

Page 40: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

40

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M121 Effect of pretreatment severity on poplar digestion by fungal cellulases and C. thermocellum CBP: insights from deconstruction rates, cell wall properties, and rare poplar natural variants V.A. Thomas* and R. Kumar, Department of

Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Center

for Environmental Research and Technology, Bourns

College of Engineering, University of California

Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Riverside, CA; S. Bhagia,

University of California Riverside, Bourns College of

Engineering Center for Environmental Research &

Technology and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Riverside, CA; H. Akinosho,

University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN; A. Ragauskas,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; C.E.

Wyman, Center for Environmental Research and

Technology, Bourns College of Engineering, University

of California Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Riverside, CA

M122 Enzymatic hydrolysis, inhibition and characterization of sugarcane bagasse pretreated at different severities A. de França Bisol*, Novozymes, Franklinton, NC;

V. Serpa Muller, E.A. Borges da Silva and A. Ribeiro

Gaspar, Novozymes, Araucária - PR, Brazil; M. Noseda,

Universidade Federal do Parana, Curitiba

M123 Impact of the presence of lignin on the enzymatic hydrolysis of wheat straw D. Hudebine*, IFP Energies nouvelles, Solaize, France,

N. Lopes Ferreira, IFP Energies nouvelles, Rueil-

Malmaison, France and M. Huron, IFPEN, Solaize,

France

M124 Effect of phenolic compounds derived from pretreated sugarcane bagasse on cellulolytic activities M. Michelin, University of Sao Paulo -FFCLRP, Ribeirão

Preto-SP-Brazil; E. Ximenes* and M. Ladisch, Purdue

University, West Lafayette, IN; M.D.L.T.D.M. Polizeli,

Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão

Preto, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Ribeirão Preto,

Brazil

M125 Enzyme catalyzed disassembly of corn kernels D. Orrego*, D. Kim, L. Zhang and T. Kreke, Laboratory

of Renewable Resources Engineering, Purdue

University, West Lafayette, IN; E. Ximenes and M.

Ladisch, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

M126 Fundamental understanding of the recalcitrant cell wall present in hydrolysate at different stages of enzyme hydrolysis C. Gunawan* and B.E. Dale, DOE Great Lakes

Bioenergy Research Center, Michigan State University,

Lansing, MI; L.D.C. Sousa, M. Jin and V. Balan, DOE

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, Lansing, MI; S.

Pattathil, University of Georgia, Athens, GA

M127 Ethanol production from sugarcane under very-high-gravity (VGH) fermentation conditions: experimental study and kinetic modeling E.A. Ccopa Rivera* and C.K. Yamakawa, Brazilian

Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory -

Brazilian Center for Research in Energy and Materials

(CTBE/CNPEM), Campinas, SP, Brazil; D. Ibraim Pires

Atala and W. Bonicontro Ambrosio, British Petroleum,

Campinas, SP, Brazil; A. Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory (CTBE),

Campinas, SP, Brazil

M128 Accessory enzymes produced by a newly isolated Lasiodiplodia theobromae from Amazon forest with potential for use in biomass degradation C.B. Costa, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas, Brazil;

P.D.S. Delabona*, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas, Brazil,

Campinas, Brazil; G.N. Rodrigues, Brazilian Laboratory

of Science and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE,

Brazil, Campinas; D. Kolling, Brazilian Laboratory of

Science and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Brazil;

P.D.S. Costa and D.J.D.S. Lima, Brazilian Laboratory

of Science and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE,

Campinas, Brazil, Brazil; M.D.S. Souza, M.O. Lee and

A.S. Santos, Universidade Federal do Pará, Belém;

J.G.D.C. Pradella, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Brazil, Campinas,

Brazil

M129 Overexpression of XYR1 to increase cellulases production in Trichoderma harzianum P.D.S. Delabona*, C.M.P. Braga and G.N. Rodrigues,

Brazilian Laboratory of Science and Technology

of Bioethanol - CTBE, Brazil, Campinas; B. Seiboth,

Vienna University of Technology; C.S. Farinas,

Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation, Embrapa

Instrumentation, São Carlos, Brazil; J.G.D.C. Pradella,

Brazilian Laboratory of Science and Technology of

Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas

Page 41: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

41

Poster sessions

Mon

day,

Apr

il 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M130 Evaluation of chemical treatment for glucose production from steam exploded reed (Phragmites australis) J.Y. Jung*, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju,

South Korea; J.S. Kim, S.Y. Ha, J.B. Nam and J.K. Yang,

Gyeongsang National University, Gyeongsangnam-

do, South Korea; M.S. Choi, 2Division of Environmental

Forest Science, Institute of Agriculture & Life Sciences,

Gyeongsang National University

M131 Hydrolytic efficiency of two commercial enzymes and its impact on ethanol production from alkali-acid-pretreated rice straw R.C.A. Castro*, I.S. Ferreira and I.C. Roberto, Escola

de Engenharia de Lorena, Universidade de São

Paulo, Lorena, Brazil; H.T.L. Santos, B.G. Fonseca,

M.S. Mendonça and A.M.M. Maia, Departamento

de Biotecnologia, Escola de Engenharia de Lorena,

Universidade de São Paulo, Lorena, Brazil

M132 Understanding the factors that contribute to extractive ammonia (EA) pretreatment performance L.D.C. Sousa*, J.F. Humpula, C. Gunawan, V. Balan

and B.E. Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research

Center, Michigan State University, Lansing, MI

M133 Evaluation of bioethanol production from mixed spruce and birch feedstock B. Frankó*, M. Galbe and O. Wallberg, Lund University,

Lund, Sweden

M134 Two-stage acid hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass to fermentable sugar production J.H. Park*, J. Kim, Y.C. Park and J.S. Kim, Kyonggi

University, Suwon

M135 Comparisons of pretreatment of switchgrass by CELF to that possible by hydrothermal and dilute acid pretreatments A. Patri* and C.E. Wyman, Center for Environmental

Research and Technology, Bourns College of

Engineering, University of California Riverside,

and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Riverside, CA; C. Cai and R. Kumar,

University of California, Riverside and BioEnergy

Science Center (BESC), Riverside, CA

M136 Enhancement of enzymatic hydrolysis of woody biomass by pretreatment of organosolv with acid solution J. Kim*, J.H. Park, Y.C. Park and J.S. Kim, Kyonggi

University, Suwon; J.S. Lee, KIER, Daejeon

M137 Rapid diagnosis of bacterial contamination in ethanol fermentation process M.C. Souza e Silva*, MC DESINFECÇÃO INDUSTRIAL,

RIBEIRÃO PRETO

M138 Nutrient removal and methane production from the waste sludge of shrimp aquaculture production system using sequencing batch reactor R. Boopathy*, Nicholls State University, Thibodaux, LA

M139 Feasibility of a biochemical conversion of drought resistant California Agave spp . to fuel ethanol without pretreatment M.L. Lu*, Bourns College of Engineering, University of

California, Riverside, Riverside, CA and C.E. Wyman,

Center for Environmental Research and Technology,

Bourns College of Engineering, University of California

Riverside, and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge

National Laboratory, Riverside, CA

M140 Thermogravimetric analysis and kinetic study of lactic acid A. Komesu, University of Campinas, Campinas,

Brazil; P. Martins Martinez and J. Oliveira, University

of Campinas; B. Hoss Lunelli and M.R. Wolf Maciel*,

School of Chemical Engineering, University of

Campinas - Unicamp, Campinas, Brazil; R. Maciel

Filho, School of Chemical Engineering, University of

Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil

M141 Debottlenecking high-solids concentration enzymatic hydrolysis: ball-milling tumbling reactor and use of surfactants J.G.D.C. Pradella*, C.M. de Carli, S.C. Rabelo and

D. Kolling, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas

M142 Rapid measurement of xylose and glucose for monitoring corn stover fermentation in bioethanol production W. Miller* and J. Klingensmith, YSI Life Sciences, Yellow

Springs, OH; N. Dowe, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO

M143 Evaluation of alkaline-assisted wet-storage of energycane bagasse J. Cao*, Louisiana State University Agricultural Center,

St. Gabriel, LA and G. Aita, Audubon Sugar Institute, St

Gabriel, LA

Page 42: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

42

Poster sessions

Monday, A

pril 27

syMPosiuM on Biotechnology for fuels And cheMicAls 2015

M144 Integrating electrocoagulation (EC) and biological routes to convert organic residues into value-added chemicals Z. Liu*, W. Liao and Y. Liu, Michigan State University,

East Lansing, MI

M145 Kinetic study of the enzymatic hydrolysis of sugarcane straw for 2G ethanol production A.J.G. Cruz*, Universidade Federal de São Carlos

(UFSCar), São Carlos, Brazil, R. Sousa Jr, Federal

University of Sao Carlos, Sao Carlos, Brazil and B.

Pratto, Chemical Engineering Graduate Program/

Federal University of São Carlos, São Carlos

M146 Economical and sustainable conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to fuels and co-products S.I. Mussatto* and L.A.M. van der Wielen, Delft

University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands

M147 Modulation of Penicillium echinulatum glycoside hydrolases J.G.D.C. Pradella*, Brazilian Laboratory of Science

and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas,

P.D.S. Costa, Brazilian Laboratory of Science

and Technology of Bioethanol, Campinas, P.D.S.

Delabona, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas, Brazil,

Campinas, Brazil, D. Robl, Brazilian Laboratory

of Science and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE,

Campinas, Brazil, D.J.D.S. Lima, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory, Campinas

and D. Kolling, Brazilian Laboratory of Science and

Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Brazil

M148 Production efficiency versus thermostability of (hemi)cellulolytic enzymatic cocktails from different cultivation systems V. M. Vasconcellos, Federal University of Sao Carlos,

Sao Carlos, P.W. Tardioli, Federal University of São

Carlos, São Carlos-SP, Brazil, R.L.C. Giordano, Federal

University of Sao Carlos, Sao Carlos, Brazil and C.S.

Farinas*, Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,

Embrapa Instrumentation, São Carlos, Brazil

M149 Optimization of endoglucanase production by Cellulomonas sp L.F. Gomes, University of Brasilia, Brasília, DF, Brazil;

T.D. Mendes, T.F. Pacheco, T.F.C. Salum* and M.C.T.

Damaso, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, DF, Brazil;

D.A.D.M. Silva, Universidade Católica de Brasília,

Brasília, DF, Brazil; P. Talia and E. Campos, INTA

Castelar, Buenos Aires, Argentina

M150 The fusion of a carbohydrate binding module 6 (CBM6) to GH11 xylanase improves the catalytic efficiency R. Ruller*, National Center for Research in Energy and

Materials (CNPEM), Campinas-São PauloçBrazil; L.M.

Zanphorlin and A.R.L. Damásio, National Center for

Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM), Campinas,

Brazil; J.A. Diogo, J. Cota and M.T. Murakami, National

Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM),

Campinas; F.M. Squina, Brazilian Bioethanol Science

and Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas; Z.

Hoffmam, National Center for Research in Energy and

Materials (CNPEM), Campinas/São Paulo/Brazil

M151 Bioabatement with xylanase supplementation to reduce enzymatic hydrolysis inhibitors G. Cao, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin-China;

E. Ximenes* and M.R. Ladisch, Purdue University, West

Lafayette, IN; N.N. Nichols and M.A. Cotta, United

States Department of Agriculture, National Center for

Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria, IL; S. Frazer,

Agricultural Research Service-USDA, Peoria, IL; D. Kim,

Laboratory of Renewable Resources Engineering,

Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

M152 Analytical service solutions for biomass characterization R. Naran*, I. Black, R. Sonon and P. Azadi, University of

Georgia, Athens, GA

M153 Evaluation of sugarcane plants with reduced lignin content for production of sugar, first generation ethanol and electricity F. M. Mendes, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE/CNPEM) and University

of São Paulo (EEL-USP), Campinas and Lorena; M. O. S.

Dias*, Federal University of São Paulo (ICT/UNIFESP),

São José dos Campos; A. Ferraz and A.M.F. Milagres,

Escola de Engenharia de Lorena - USP, Lorena, Brazil;

J.C. Santos, University of São Paulo (EEL-USP), Lorena,

Brazil; A. Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, SP, Brazil

M154 Production of 4-deoxy-L-erythro-5-hexoseulose uronate from alginate by using endo- and exo-type alginate lyases D.M. Wang* and D.H. Kim, Korea University, Seoul;

K.H. Kim, Korea University Graduate School, Seoul,

South Korea

Page 43: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

43

Poster sessions

tues

day,

Apr

il 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

posTer session 2: microbial science and Technology; renewable fuels, Chemicals, and bio-based productsAventine Ballroom ABC & Grand Foyer, Ballroom Level

T1 Microbial modification of synthetic lignin by Abortiporus biennis : analysis of degradation products and structural changes of synthetic lignin C.Y. Hong, S.Y. Park*, H.S. Jeong, S.K. Jang and I.G.

Choi, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea

T3 Development of SynBio tools to more predictably clone, express and select biocatalytic activities for metabolic pathway optimization S. McColm*, Ingenza Ltd., Roslin

T4 An engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae for cost-effective lignocellulosic bioethanol production: process performance and physiological insights A.D. Moreno*, C. Geijer and L. Olsson, Chalmers

University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden; E.

Tomás-Pejó, IMDEA Energy, Móstoles, Spain

T5 The promises and challenges of applying public omics datasets to the development of advanced biofuels producers S. Yang*, W. Wang, H. Wei, M.E. Himmel and M.

Zhang, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

T6 Feedstock rapid screening for fast pyrolysis using a focused microwave beam reactor T. Westover* and R.M. Emerson, Idaho National

Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID; D. Carpenter, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; D. Howe,

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA

T7 Scale-up of multi-feed fed-batch simultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation of pretreated wheat straw to ethanol J. Westman*, R. Wang, P. Unrean, L. Olsson and

C.J. Franzén, Chalmers University of Technology,

Gothenburg, Sweden

T8 Bioreactor performance data and preliminary biorefinery techno-economics for the production of distillate fuels via bioconversion of pretreated corn stover by Lipomyces starkeyi J.R. Collett* and Z. Dai, Pacific Northwest National

Laboratory, Richland, WA; A. Meyer, Y. Zhu, E.R.

Hawley, M.G. Butcher and S. Jones, Pacific Northwest

National Laboratory; J.K. Magnuson, Joint BioEnergy

Institute, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory,

Richland, WA

T9 Conversion of sugars into hydrocarbons for blending into jet and diesel fuels: general considerations D.K. Johnson*, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO

T10 Elucidating the effect of aggregation of lignin particles on aqueous characteristics of lignin C.J. Joshua* and S.W. Singer, Joint BioEnergy Institute,

Emeryville, CA; B. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy Institute /

Sandia National Laboratories, Emeryville, CA

T11 Physico-chemical properties assessment of silk fibroin during its processing and aging S.M. Valles Ramirez* and M. Masumi Beppu, State

University of Campinas, Campinas, SP - Brazil; M.

Agostini de Moraes, Federal University of São Paulo,

Diadema, SP - Brazil

T12 Discovery of the novel metabolic pathway of the non-fermentable 3,6-anhydro-L-galactose from red macroalgae E.J. Yun and S. Lee, Korea University, Seoul; I.G. Choi,

Korea University, Seoul, South Korea; K.H. Kim*, Korea

University Graduate School, Seoul, South Korea

T13 Mechanistic study of dehydration in HZSM-5 using density functional theory S. Kim*, D. Robichaud, C. Mukarakate, L. Bu, T. Evans,

G. Beckham and M.R. Nimlos, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; R.S. Paton, University

of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

T14 Bio-based vs . petrochemical production of commodity chemicals A.J.J. Straathof*, Delft University of Technology, Delft,

Netherlands

Page 44: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

44

Poster sessions

tuesday, April 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T15 Lignin-based UV stabilizer for renewable bioplastics J. Staudhammer and Z. Li*, Oregon State University,

Corvallis, OR; M. Miner, Bosky Optics, Corvallis, OR

T16 Succinic acid production from pentose rich sources in Actinobacillus succinogenes H. Almqvist*, M. Neuhauser and G. Lidén, Lund

University, Lund

T17 Process strategies to maximize lipid accumulations of novel yeast in acid and base pretreated hydrolyzates P.J. Slininger*, USDA-ARS, Peoria, IL; B.S. Dien, C.P.

Kurtzman, B.R. Moser, E.L. Bakota, R.L. Evangelista,

S.R. Thompson, P. O’Bryan and M.A. Cotta, National

Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, USDA-

ARS, Peoria, IL; V. Balan, Y. Xue, M. Jin, A. Orjuela,

L.D. Sousa and B.E. Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Lansing, MI

T18 Optimization of culture medium for improve glycerol consumption and 1,3-propanediol production by Clostridium beijerinckii DSM 791 D. Wischral* and C.A. Barcelos, Federal University of

Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro; N. Pereira Jr., Federal

University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil;

F.L.P. Pessoa, School of Chemistry/UFRJ, Rio de

Janeiro, Brazil

T19 Process features for an efficient ethanol conversion to n-butanol M. Oliveira de Souza Dias*, Universidade Federal

de São Paulo, São José dos Campos, SP, Brazil, L.G.

Pereira, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology

Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil, A.

Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology

Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil and R. Maciel

Filho, School of Chemical Engineering, University of

Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, SP, Brazil, Brazil

T20 Identifying conditions to optimize lactic acid production from food waste R. Red Corn* and A.S. Engelberth, Purdue University,

West Lafayette, IN

T21 Analysis of the production of sugars, furfural and syngas platforms from lignocellulosics C.A. Cardona Sr.* and V. Aristizábal, Instituto de

Biotecnología y Agroindustria, Departamento

de Ingeniería Química. Universidad Nacional de

Colombia sede Manizales., Manizales, Colombia; A.

gomez Peña, Universidad Nacional de Colombia sede

Manizales, Manizales

T22 Engineered biocatalyst for styrene production from pyrolitic sugar J. Lian*, Iowa State University, Ames, IA

T23 Functional characterization of terpene synthases from four endophytic xylariaceae W. Wu*, W. Tran and C.A. Taatjes, Sandia National

Labs, Livermore, CA; J.M. Gladden, Joint BioEnergy

Institute, Emeryville, CA

T24 New pilot plant capabilities for demonstrating biochemical-based technologies for advanced biofuel production from lignocellulosic biomass D.J. Schell* and J. Shekiro, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO; J. Lischeske and D. Sievers,

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

T25 Acid hydrolysis and lactic acid fermentation of Korean food waste by engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae Y.S. Kim*, S.J. Park and B.H. Um, Hankyong National

University, Anseong; B.J. Yu, Korea Institute of

Industrial Technology, Cheonan; A.R. Park, Korea

Institute of Industrial Technology, Cheonan, South

Korea

T26 Bioethanol production by Scheffersomyces stipitis in intensified bioreactors using xylose and glucose as mixed carbon sources S.C. Santos*, National Center for Energy and Materials

Research (CNPEM), Brazilian Bioethanol Science

and Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, São

Paulo, Brazil, Campinas; S.R. Dionisio and J.L. Ienczak,

Laboratório Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia do

Bioetanol - CTBE, Campinas - SP, Brazil; A.L.D.D.

Andrade and L.R. Roque, National Center for Energy

and Materials Research (CNPEM), Campinas; A.C.

Costa, School of Chemical Engineering, State

University of Campinas, Campinas, Brazil

T27 Supercritical treatment of organosolv lignin using formic acid as in-situ hydrogen source for production of valued chemicals S.Y. Park*, C.Y. Hong, S.K. Jang, H.S. Jeong, G.H. Ryu

and I.G. Choi, Seoul National University, Seoul, South

Korea

Page 45: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

45

Poster sessions

tues

day,

Apr

il 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T28 Microwave-assisted methanolysis of lignocellulose into methyl levulinate W. Xiao* and L. Han, College of Engineering, China

Agricultural University, Beijing; X. Zhang and N.

Mosier, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

T29 Ionic liquid tolerance in microbes D.A. Higgins*, T.L. Ruegg, S. Singer and M.P. Thelen,

Joint BioEnergy Institute, Emeryville, CA; T.K. Sato,

DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, Madison,

WI; B. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia

National Laboratories, Emeryville, CA

T30 SSF of alkali and concentrated-acid treated switchgrass for ABE production W. Guan*, V.R. Pallapolu, M. Tu and Y.Y. Lee, Auburn

University, Auburn, AL

T31 Techno/economic and life cycle assessment of the production of high value chemicals: acetic acid case study E.L. Budsberg*, J.T. Crawford, H. Morgan, R. Gustafson,

R. Bura and W.S. Chin, University of Washington,

Seattle, WA

T32 Economic and environmental assessment of the fructooligosaccharides production by different fermentation processes . A comparative study S.I. Mussatto*, Delft University of Technology, Delft,

Netherlands; L.M. Aguiar, M.I. Marinha, R.C. Jorge and

E.C. Ferreira, University of Minho, Braga, Portugal

T33 Towards cost-efficient production of methyl propionate from lignocellulosic biomass J. P.C. Pereira* and A.J.J. Straathof, Delft University of

Technology, Delft, Netherlands; L.A.M. van der Wielen,

Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands

T34 Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation of the oleaginous yeast genus Lipomyces Z. Dai*, S. Deng, D.E. Culley and K.S. Bruno, Pacific

Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA;

J.K. Magnuson, Joint BioEnergy Institute, Pacific

Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA

T35 Cellobionic acid conversion to the drop-in biofuel candidate, isobutanol S. Desai*, C. Rabinovitch-Deere, Y. Tashiro and S.

Atsumi, University of Californa, Davis, Davis, CA

T36 Fractionation, characterization, and conversion of biorefinery process lignins to phenolic acids and aldehydes R.J. Stoklosa*, T. Phongpreecha and D.B. Hodge,

Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI

T37 Cost modelling of first generation sugar cane bioethanol production processing units J.F. Cuadros Bohórquez*, Centro Nacional de

Pesquisas em Energia e Materiais-CNPEM, Campinas;

C.D.F. Jesus, V.L.R. Gouvêia and A. Bonomi, Brazilian

Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory

(CTBE), Campinas, Brazil

T38 Effects of free fatty acid, moisture content, and working volume on biodiesel production from palm oil using a non-catalyzed supercritical process (II) D.H. Park*, S.F. Rahman, H.M. Lee and J.H. Park,

Chonnam National University, Gwangju; S.H. Park,

Chonnam National University, Gwangju, South Korea

T39 Fermentative production of xylitol in a pilot fermentor A. Turi, B. Gal, C. Fehér and Z. Barta*, Budapest

University of Technology and Economics, Budapest

T40 Evaluation of sugarcane bagasse hemicellulosic hydrolysate for succinic acid production by Actinobacillus succinogenes P. Vaz de Arruda, Laboratório Nacional de Ciência

e Tecnologia do Bioetanol - CTBE, Campinas - SP -

Brazil, E. Capelari Renzano, Laboratório Nacional de

Ciência e Tecnologia do Bioetanol / CTBE, Campinas -

SP - Brazil, S.C. Rabelo, Brazilian Laboratory of Science

and Technology of Bioethanol - CTBE, Campinas,

Brazil, J.L. Ienczak, Laboratório Nacional de Ciência e

Tecnologia do Bioetanol - CTBE, Campinas - SP, Brazil

and J.G.C. Pradella*, Laboratório Nacional de Ciência

e Tecnologia do Bioetanol – CTBE, Campinas - SP,

Brazil

T41 The putative cellodextrin transporter-like protein CLP1 is involved in cellulase induction in Neurospora crassa C. Tian*, P. Cai, X. Xing and Q. Wang, Tianjin Institute

of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of

Sciences, Tianjin, China

Page 46: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

46

Poster sessions

tuesday, April 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T42 Ultrasound assisted transesterification of soybean oil using supported zirconate based solids as catalysts L. Vaz, Federal University of Uberlandia, Uberlandia;

M.I. Martins and M. Reis, Federal University of

Uberlandia, Uberlândia; G. Madrona*, State University

of Maringa, Maringa; V. Cardoso, Universidade

Federal de Uberlândia, Uberlândia

T43 Stan Mayfield Biorefinery: update and current status I.U. Nieves*, W.J. Sagues, E. Castro, M.T. Fernández-

Sandoval and L. Wang, University of Florida, Perry, FL;

L.O. Ingram, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

T44 Succinic acid production from xylose-enriched biorefinery streams by Actinobacillus succinogenes D. Salvachua*, A. Mohagheghi, H. Smith, M.J. Biddy,

N. Dowe and G.T. Beckham, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; W. Nicol, University of

Pretoria, Pretoria (South Africa)

T45 Microbial diversity in different stages of the ethanol production process using culture-independent techniques B. Quirino*, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, DF, Brazil;

C. Barreto and O.Y. Costa, Universidade Catolica

de Brasilia, Brasilia; B. Souto, Embrapa Agroenergy,

Brasilia, Brazil; D. Tupinamba and J.C. Bergmann,

Universidade Catolica de Brasilia, Brasilia, Brazil; R.H.

Kruger, Universidade de Brasilia, Brasilia, Brazil; C.

Kyaw, Universidade de Brasilia, Brasilia

T46 A multi-coproduct model to capture value from yeast cellular biomass: A case study from an oleaginous yeast, Rhodosporidium

babjevae I.R. Sitepu, L. Garay, H.E. Teh, L. Anderson, A. Franz,

B. German, C.W. Simmons and K.L. Boundy-Mills*,

University of California Davis, Davis, CA; T. Cajka and

O. Fiehn, University of California Davis, DAVIS, CA; Z.

Pan, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA

T47 Techno-economic evaluation of ethanol production from bark-containing forest residues B. Frankó*, M. Galbe and O. Wallberg, Lund University,

Lund, Sweden

T48 Natural antibiotics from lignocellulosic wastes for the control of lactic acid bacteria in bioethanol production from the organic fraction of municipal solid waste S. Haris*, Masdar Institute of Science & Technology,

Abu Dhabi, UAE., Abu Dhabi

T49 Combined production of biogas and ethanol at high solids loading from steam-pretreated wheat straw impregnated with organic acids K. Kovacs*, Lund University, LUND; D. Dienes, Lund

University; M. Galbe and O. Wallberg, Lund University,

Lund, Sweden

T50 Integrated biorefinery for the production of biofuels and terpenes from loblolly pine: A technoeconomic assessment N.V.S.N.M. Konda*, Joint BioEnergy Institue, Lawrence

Berkeley National Laboratory, Emeryville, CA, G.

Papa, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,

B. Simmons, Joint BioEnergy Institute / Sandia

National Laboratories, Emeryville, CA and D. Klein-

Marcuschamer, University of Queensland, St. Lucia,

QLD, Australia

T51 Integration of first-generation ethanol with biotechnological production of xylitol: A preliminary study on the impact of sucrose supplementation of sugarcane straw hemicellulosic hydrolysate A.F. Hernández and I.A.L. Costa, Escola de Engenharia

de Lorena, Universidade de São Paulo, Lorena, Brazil;

M.D.G.A. Felipe*, Engineering School of Lorena -

University of São Paulo, Lorena, Brazil

T52 Technological challenges for producing hydrogen from biomass C.A. Cardona Sr.*, Instituto de Biotecnología y

Agroindustria, Departamento de Ingeniería Química.

Universidad Nacional de Colombia sede Manizales.,

Manizales, Colombia; C.A. García and R. Betancourt,

Universidad Nacional de Colombia sede Manizales,

manizales- COLOMBIA

T53 Sugar cane bagasse medium optimization to SCP protein production by a Candida tropicalis strain from Brazilian biome M.G.S. Andrietta*, UNICAMP/CPQBA, Paulinia, M.I.

Rodrigues, Protimiza, Campinas and S.R. Andrietta,

Biocontal, Campinas

Page 47: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

47

Poster sessions

tues

day,

Apr

il 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T54 The efficient lactic acid production from dried oil palm trunk I.Y. Eom* and J.H. Yu, Korea Research Institute of

Chemical Technology, Daejeon, South Korea; Y.H.

Oh, Korea Research Institute of Chemical technology,

Daejeon

T55 Physiological characterization and genetic improvement of xylose-fermenting yeasts A.C.S. Antunes, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, Brazil,

T.F. Pacheco, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, DF, Brazil,

S.B. Gonçalves, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, DF

- Brazil and J.R.M. Almeida*, Embrapa Agroenergy,

Brasília, DF, Brazil

T56 1,3-Propanediol production using crude glycerol from biodiesel conversion X. Yang, H.S. Choi, H.Y. Yoo, D.S. Kim, S.B. Kim, S.J. Lee

and S.W. Kim*, Korea University, Seoul, Korea; C. Park,

Kwangwoon University, Seoul, Korea

T57 Moorella strains for the production of biochemicals from syngas S. Redl* and T. Ølshøj Jensen, Denmark Technical

University, Horsholm; A. Nielsen, Denmark Technical

University, Horsholm, Denmark

T58 Aqueous phase hydrodeoxygenation of dilute alkali extracted corn stover lignin to jet fuel range hydrocarbons (C7-C18) H. Wang*, H. Ruan and B. Yang, Washington State

University, Richland, WA; M. Tucker, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

T59 Expressing heterologous cellulases in oleaginous yeast Yarrowia lipolytica: bottlenecks and opportunities H. Wei*, W. Wang, M. Alahuhta, T. Vander Wall, S.R.

Decker, J.O. Baker, L.E. Taylor II, M. Zhang and M.E.

Himmel, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

T60 Direct production of propene from the thermolysis of poly(β-hydroxybutyrate) A. Mittal*, H.M. Pilath and D.K. Johnson, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

T61 Production of pullulan on a dilute acid-treated prairie cordgrass hydrolysate by a fungal mutant strain relative to its parent strain T.P. West*, South Dakota State University, Brookings,

SD

T62 Xylitol production from pretreated olive stone J.M. Romero-García, E. Ruiz-Ramos, C. Cara and

E. Castro*, University of Jaen, Jaen, Spain; C. Fehér,

Budapest University of Technology and Economics,

Hungary; Z. Barta, Budapest University of Technology

and Economics, Budapest, Hungary

T63 Fermentation of AFEX-treated sugars for biochemical production S. Jadhav, S. Schwegmann, S. Boles, C.D. Nielson,

J.J. Videto*, B.D. Bals, J. Wynn and F. Teymouri, MBI

International, Lansing, MI

T64 Enrichment of carbon monoxide utilising microorganisms from methanogenic bioreactor sludge A.L. Pereira and D. Sousa, Laboratory of Microbiology,

Wageningen University, Wageningen; A. Stams and

M. Alves*, Centre of Biological Engineering, University

of Minho, Braga

T65 A new system for synthesis and secretion of oils in yeasts L. Garay*, D. Block, B. German and K.L. Boundy-Mills,

University of California Davis, Davis, CA; I. Sitepu, T.

Cajka and O. Fiehn, University of California Davis,

DAVIS, CA

T66 Optimization of lactic acid production using the sugarcane bagasse by Lactobacillus

coryniformis D. Silveira Santos Martins, E.R. Borges Sr., D. Silva,

L. Jaramillo, L.C.S. Carlos and N. Pereira Jr., Federal

University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil;

L.M.M. Santa Anna, Petrobras, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil;

D. Wischral*, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio

de Janeiro

T67 High-throughput sequencing characterization of land use impact on archaeal community: Amazon native forest and oil palm plantation D. Tupinamba and J.C. Bergmann, Universidade

Catolica de Brasilia, Brasilia, Brazil; M. Cantao,

Embrapa Swine and Poultry Research Center,

Concordia SC; O.Y. Costa and C. Barreto, Universidade

Catolica de Brasilia, Brasilia; C. Kyaw, Universidade

de Brasilia, Brasilia; B. Quirino*, Embrapa Agroenergy,

Brasília, DF, Brazil

Page 48: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

48

Poster sessions

tuesday, April 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T68 Optimizing the expression profile of cellulase genes in Trichoderma reesei as a function of the carbon source C. Derlot*, IFP Energies nouvelles, Rueil-Malmaison,

France; S. Blanquet and E. Thibault, IFP Energies

nouvelles; J.M. Beckerich, UMR AgroParisTech INRA,

Grignon; H. Mathis, IFP Energies nouvelles

T69 The prospect for developing a consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) strain using xylan as the substrate: the case study of Yarrowia lipolytica W. Wang*, H. Wei, M. Alahuhta, M. Zhang and M.E.

Himmel, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,

Golden, CO

T70 Evaluation of tomato waste feedstocks for microbial fuel cells R. Dowdy* and J. Weeks, University of California,

Davis, Davis, CA; C.W. Simmons, University of

California Davis, Davis, CA

T71 Identification of cellulase genes in Acremonium strictum isolated from Brazilian biome R. Goldbeck*, G.S. Teixeira, O.V.C. Netto, M.F.

Carazzolle and G.A.G. Pereira, University of Campinas

- UNICAMP, Campinas, Brazil; F. Maugeri Filho,

University of Campinas – UNICAMP, Campinas, Brazil

T72 High-yield conversion of cellulose into α-ketoglutaric acid by Yarrowia lipolytica via a simultaneous saccharification and fermentation in ionic liquid process S. Ryu* and C.T. Trinh, University of Tennessee,

Knoxville, TN; N. Labbé, The University of Tennessee,

Knoxville, TN

T73 In situ conversion of phenolic compounds as a tool to phenolic tolerance development by Saccharomyces cerevisiae P.T. Adeboye*, M. Bettiga and L. Olsson, Chalmers

University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden

T74 Continuous butanol and iso-propanol fermentation using immobilized Clostridium beijerinckii optonii Y. Yang*, Louisiana State University Agricultural Center,

St Gabriel, LA, Y.H. Moon, Louisiana State University

Agricultural Center and D. Day, Louisiana State

University Agricultural Center, Saint Gabriel, LA

T75 Microbial consortia from hot compost for the production of thermostable cellulases and hemicellulases C. de la Cerna-Hernández, E. Reyes-Cervantes and S.R.

Trejo-Estrada*, IPN, Tlaxcala, Mexico; E. Ocaranza, IPN,

Tlaxcala; E. Rubio-Rosas, BUAP, Puebla, México

T76 Expression of AraE, an arabinose symporter, enhances xylose consumption in Bacillus

subtilis and xylose-fermenting Saccharomyces

cerevisiae H.S. Lee, B.M. Kim and Y.C. Park*, Kookmin University,

Seoul, Republic of Korea; D.H. Kweon, Sungkyunkwan

University, Suwon, Republic of Korea

T77 Improved algal biofuel yield through bioconversion of proteins to mixed alcohols and sesquiterpenes W. Wu* and R.W. Davis, Sandia National Labs,

Livermore, CA

T78 Characterization of a syngas-assimilating bacterium Moorella sp . strain Y72 K. Murakami*, Z.I. Kimura and T. Hoshino, National

Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and

Technology (AIST), Higashi-hiroshima, Japan

T79 Development of next generation yeast strains for ethanol production from lignocellulosic feedstocks P. Klaassen, H. de Bruijn*, B.H. van Rijsewijk and H.

Pel, DSM Biotechnology Center, Delft, Netherlands;

C. Koolloos, DSM Bio-based Products & Services B.V.,

Delft

T80 Constitutive expression of genes relevant to xylose catabolism in ethanol-producing E. coli KO11 for improvement of xylose utilization K. Ohta*, Y. Taniguchi and H. Fujimoto, University of

Miyazaki, Miyazaki

T81 Toward conversion of corn stover to ethanol by Saccharomyces cerevisiae displaying a cellulosome T. Hanly*, M. Kostylev and Y. Suzuki, J. Craig Venter

Institute, La Jolla, CA

Page 49: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

49

Poster sessions

tues

day,

Apr

il 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T82 Characterization of water-soluble lignin extractives from extractive ammonia (EA) pretreatment and their effects on yeast fermentation using synthetic biomass hydrolysate (SynH) S. Xue*, M. Jin, C. Sarks and V. Balan, DOE Great Lakes

Bioenergy Research Center, Lansing, MI; A.D. Jones,

Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI; L.D.C.

Sousa and B.E. Dale, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy

Research Center, Michigan State University, Lansing,

MI

T83 Production of biochemical using a nar promoter based expression system in Escherichia coli H.J. Hwang*, J.H. Kim, J.H. Lee, H.J. Kang and P.C. Lee,

Ajou University, Suwon

T84 Development and applications of an optimal Hypocrea jecorina-based enzyme expression system J.G. Linger*, M.E. Himmel and S.R. Decker, National

Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; L.

Schuster, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

T85 Lipid production by oleaginous microorganisms via co-fermentation of glucose and xylose derived from lignocellulosic feedstock N. Dowe*, Q. Fei and A. Lowell, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO

T86 Characterization of Chlorella cell walls under nitrogen replete-deplete growth conditions L.K. Jabusch*, B.T. Higgins, J.M. Labavitch, O. Fiehn

and J.S. VanderGheynst, University of California,

Davis, Davis, CA

T87 Inhibition of Clostridium thermocellum metabolism and growth under high-solids loading fermentation-relevant conditions T.J. Verbeke* and J.G. Elkins, Biosciences Division

and BioEnergy Science Center, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; X. Shao and L.R. Lynd,

Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; N.L. Engle and T.

Tschaplinski, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak

Ridge, TN

T88 Phenotypic characterization of an engineered strain of Caldicellulosiruptor bescii with enhanced tolerance to furan aldehydes D. Chung, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, and

BioEnergy Science Center, Biosciences Division of DOE,

Oak Ridge National Laboratory; T.J. Verbeke and J.G.

Elkins*, Biosciences Division and BioEnergy Science

Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge,

TN; J. Westpheling, University of Georgia, Athens, GA,

and BioEnergy Science Center, Biosciences Division of

DOE, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN

T89 Selection of a robust yeast strain tailored for ethanol production F. Vicente, Usina Alta Mogiana S.A, Sao Joaquim da

Barra; R. Da-Silva*, IBILCE - UNESP, Sao Jose do Rio

Preto; M. Lopes and S. Paulillo, Fermentec, Piracicaba;

H. Amorim, Fermentec, piacicaba; E. Gomes, IBILCE –

UNESP, Sao Jose do Rio Preto, Brazil, Brazil

T90 Developing biological processes for ulvan and microbial oil production from Ulva

lactuca Y.S. Cheng*, Z.Z. Wu and S.C. Ge, National Yunlin

University of Science and Technology, Yunlin

T91 Transcriptional responses to redox stress in Clostridium thermocellum K.B. Sander*, Oak Ridge National Laboratory/

University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge, TN; C.M. Wilson,

B.H. Davison and S.D. Brown, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; M. Rodriguez Jr., Oak

Ridge National Laboratory; A. Bhattacharjee and R.

Goel, University of Utah

T92 Ethanol production by two selected osmotolerant yeast cultures E.M. Loza-Valerdi, L.M. Islas-Romero and L.C. Silva-

Villanueva, METCO, S. A. DE C. V., DF; J.C. Cercado-

Jaramillo, NUTRAVIA, S. A. DE C. V., PUEBLA; S.R.

Trejo-Estrada*, IPN, Tlaxcala, Mexico

T93 Establishing the formolase pathway for conversion of formate to biofuel precursors in E. coli A. Smith* and M.E. Lidstrom, University of Washington,

Seattle, WA; J. Siegel, University of California-

Davis; A. Wargacki, J. Bale and D. Baker, University

of Washington; S. Poust, University of California,

Berkeley, Emeryville, CA; A. Bar-Even, Weizmann

Institute of Sciences

Page 50: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

50

Poster sessions

tuesday, April 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T94 Development of commercial yeast strains for efficient conversion of lignocellulosic biomass into ethanol N. Tada*, N. Yasutani, H. Matsushita, H. Kikuta, E.

Tominaga, T. Kawamoto and T. Onishi, Toyota Motor

Corporation, Miyoshi, Aichi, Japan; S. Katahira, A.

Ikeuchi, R. Nagura, N. Ishida and C. Imamura, Toyota

Central R&D Labs Inc., Nagakute, Aichi, Japan

T95 Computational data mining and visualization of high-resolution mass spectrometry data sets for algal lipids A. Nag* and L. Laurens, National Renewable Energy

Laboratory, Golden, CO

T96 Fermentation of steam pretreated lignocellulosic biomass into acetic acid by Moorella thermoacetica M. Ehsanipour, A. Vajzovic Suko* and R. Bura,

University of Washington, Seattle, WA

T97 Application of fractional factorial design to study the short-term biological pretreatment of sugarcane bagasse by novel ligninolytic strains J. Strap*, University of Ontario Institute of Technology,

Oshawa, ON; B. Gonçalves and S.S.D. Silva, University

of São Paulo, Brazil

T98 Engineering Geobacillus for butanol production L. Bacon*, Bath University, Bath; D.J. Leak and M.J.

Danson, University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom

T99 Identification of gene targets improving inhibitor resistance of Saccharomyces

cerevisiae for efficient lignocellulosic biofuel production through inverse metabolic engineering N. Wei* and Y. Chen, University of Pittsburgh,

Pittsburgh, PA; X. Feng, Virginia Polytechnic Institute

and State University, Blacksburg, VA

T100 Time-course transcriptome of Bacillus

coagulans in the presence of 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate J.T. Claypool* and J. VanderGheynst, University

of California, Davis, Davis, CA; B. Simmons, Joint

BioEnergy Institute / Sandia National Laboratories,

Emeryville, CA; S.W. Singer, Joint BioEnergy Institute /

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA;

C.W. Simmons, University of California Davis, Davis,

CA

T101 Production of fermentable sugars from microalgae Chlorella pyrenoidosa J.H. Lee*, X. Yang, H.Y. Yoo, H.S. Choi and S.W.

Kim, Korea University, Seoul, Korea; C. Park, Korea

University, Seoul; C. Park, Kwangwoon University,

Seoul, Korea

T102 Optimization of 1,3-propanediol production in Lactobacillus diolivorans K. Lindlbauer*, H. Marx and M. Sauer, CD Laboratory

for Biotechnology of Glycerol, Vienna; S. Pflügl and D.

Mattanovich, BOKU - University of Natural Resources

and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria; J. Modl, Vogelbusch

GmbH, Vienna, Austria

T103 Taguchi design for optimization the microbial oil production from red oleaginous yeasts N. Wisuthiphaet*, S. Klinchan and S. Kongruang,

Faculty of Applied Science, King Mongkut’s University

of Technology North Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand

T104 Effects of nitrogen sources and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio on arginine production by genetically engineered Escherichia coli M. Ginesy*, J. Enman and U. Rova, Luleå University of

Technology, Luleå, Sweden

T105 Renewable biodiesel production from oleaginous yeast biomass using industrial wastes S. Kongruang*, Faculty of Applied Science, King

Mongkut’s University of Technology North Bangkok,

Bangkok, Thailand, S. Roytrakul, National Center

of Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology,

Pathumthani, and M. Sriariyanun, The Sirindhorn

International Thai-German Graduate School of

Engineering,King Mongkut’s University of Technology

North Bangkok, Bangkok

T106 Impact of potential fermentation inhibitor present in sweet sorghum sugar solutions K.T. Klasson*, U.S. Department of Agriculture-ARS, New

Orleans, LA

T107 Biosynthesis of ω-hydroxyundec-9-enoic acid from ricinoleic acid in recombinant Escherichia coli Y.H. Jo, H.J. Lee, D.Y. Lee and Y.C. Park*, Kookmin

University, Seoul, Republic of Korea; S.J. Kim, Seoul

National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea; J.B. Park,

Ewha Womans University, Seoul, Republic of Korea;

K. Park, Hongik University, Jochiwon, Chungnam,

Republic of Korea

Page 51: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

51

Poster sessions

tues

day,

Apr

il 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T108 Enhanced bioethanol production from cellulosic feedstocks by a modified bioreactor R.S. Juang*, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan and Y.H.

Wei, Yuan Ze University, Chung-Li

T109 Enhanced enzyme activity for biomass degrading and bioethanol producing by introduction of cellulosome-based enzyme complexes in yeast J. Hyeon* and S. Han, Korea University, Seoul

T110 Physiological role of pyruvate ferredoxin oxidoreductase and pyruvate formate lyase in Thermoanaerobacter saccharolyticum J. Zhou*, D. Olson, A. Lanahan, L. Tian, J. Lo and L.

Lynd, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH

T111 Microbial oil production from palm oil empty fruit bunch hydrolysates F. Ahmad* and W. Doherty, Queensland University

of Technology, Brisbane; Z. Zhang and I.M. O’Hara,

Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane,

Australia

T112 Production of lipid biofuel and chemicals from lignocellulose using oleaginous yeasts J. Blomqvist*, J. Brandenburg, J. Pickova, M. Sandgren

and V. Passoth, Swedish University of Agricultural

Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden

T113 New model of Clostridium thermocellum cellulosome systems and their contribution to cellulose degradation Q. Xu*, K. Podkaminer, M. Resch, J. Baker, S.R. Decker,

Y. Bomble and M.E. Himmel, National Renewable

Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; S. Yang, NREL, Golden,

CO; D.G. Olson, Dartmouth College,; S.D. Brown, Oak

Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; L. Lynd,

Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH

T114 Model lignin compounds affect lipid accumulation by the oleaginous bacterium Rhodococcus rhodochrous S.A. Shields-Menard*, M. Amirsadeghi, J. Donaldson

and T. French, Mississippi State University, Mississippi

State, MS; R. Hernandez, University of Louisiana at

Lafayette, Lafayette, LA

T115 Bio-lipid production from lignocellulose hydrolysate by the oleaginous yeast Lipomyces starkeyi J. Brandenburg*, J. Blomqvist, J. Pickova, M. Sandgren

and V. Passoth, Swedish University of Agricultural

Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden

T116 Optimizing promoters and secretory signal sequences for producing ethanol from inulin by recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae carrying Kluyveromyces marxianus inulinase S.J. Hong, J. Kim, E. Choi*, G. Bark, J.W. Kim and J.H.

Seo, Seoul National University, Seoul; H.J. Kim, Korea

Food Research Institute, Sungnam; D.H. Lee, Korea

Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology

(KRIBB), Daejeon

T117 Biodiesel production from microalgal oil extracted by acid-catalyzed hot water treatment J.Y. Park*, Korea Institute of Energy Research, Daejeon,

South Korea; B. Nam, S.A. Choi and J.S. Lee, KIER,

Daejeon; G.A. Lee and J. Yun, NLP, Busan; H.S. Kim,

KRIBB, Daejeon

T118 An assessment of extraction methods for global metabolic profiling of Escherichia coli J.H. Kim*, P.C. Lee and H.J. Hwang, Ajou University,

Suwon; S.H. Oh, Department of Molecular Science

and Technology and Department of Applied

Chemistry and Biological Engineering, Suwon

T119 Conversion of glycerol into 1,3 propanediol by a novel Klebsiella pneumoniae KC-41 N.A. Al-Dhabi*, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi

Arabia and M. Valan Arasu

T120 Enriching microbial communities and isolating microorganisms that thrive in a thermophilic, lignin-rich environment S. Ceballos* and J.S. VanderGheynst, University of

California, Davis, Davis, CA

T121 Very-high-gravity (VHG) continuous fermentation with yeast recovery, activation and recycle fermentation for ethanol production from sugarcane C.K. Yamakawa, E.A. Ccopa Rivera*, J. Nolasco Junior

and C.E. Vaz Rossell, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory - Brazilian Center for Research

in Energy and Materials (CTBE/CNPEM), Campinas,

SP, Brazil; D. Ibraim Pires Atala and W. Bonicontro

Ambrosio, British Petroleum, Campinas, SP, Brazil

Page 52: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

52

Poster sessions

tuesday, April 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T122 Thermophilic enrichment of microbial communities in the presence of tetrabutylphosphonium chloride and tributylethylphosphonium diethylphosphate ionic liquids S. Pace*, S. Ceballos, D. Harrold and J. VanderGheynst,

University of California, Davis, Davis, CA; W. Trower,

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; B.A.

Simmons and M.P. Thelen, Joint BioEnergy Institute,

Emeryville, CA; S.W. Singer, Lawrence Berkeley

National Laboratory

T123 Strategies to improve lactic acid fermentation –evaluation of alternatives fermentation strategies R.A. Oliveira*, State University of Campinas, Campinas,

SP, Brazil, Brazil and R.M. Filho, School of Chemical

Engineering, State University of Campinas, Campinas,

Brazil

T124 Functional characterization of reversed β-Oxidation pathway in Escherichia coli for the production of adipic acid T. Babu*, E.J. Yun and S. Kim, Korea University, Seoul;

H.T. Kim, Korea Research Institute of Chemical

Technology, Daejeon; K.H. Kim, Korea University

Graduate School, Seoul, South Korea

T125 Rational pathway design and adaptive evolution to develop an efficient cell factory for biofuel production from lignocellulose L. Tian*, D. Olson and L.R. Lynd, Dartmouth College,

Hanover, NH; B. Papanek, University of Tennessee,

Knoxville, TN; A.M. Guss, Oak Ridge National

Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN

T126 Improving succinate production from glycerol by Actinobacillus succinogenes R.V. Joshi* and C. Vieille, Michigan State University,

East Lansing, MI

T127 Engineering Actinobacillus succinogenes for succinate production from xylose N.R. McPherson* and C. Vieille, Michigan State

University, East Lansing, MI

T128 Production of 2-butanol from crude glycerol by a genetically-engineered Klebsiella

pneumoniae strain B. Oh*, S.Y. Heo, J.W. Seo, W.K. Hong and C.H. Kim,

Korea Research Institute of Bioscience, South Korea

T129 High-throughput screening and selection of high lipid producers for biofuels W. Lew*, Molecular Devices LLC, Sunnyvale, CA

T130 Comparative genomic analysis based on Zymomonas mobilis subsp . mobilis ATCC 29191 leads to insights regarding Zymomonas K.M. Pappas*, A. Desiniotis, V. Kouvelis and M. Typas,

University of Athens, Athens, Greece

T131 Bacteria diversity isolated from pine, agave and palm species in restoration process: an emerging technology for feedstock biofuel production M.I. Ramos Robles, Instituto Politecnico National,

Tlaxcala C.P., Mexico, A.D.C. Ruiz-Font*, National

Polythecnic Institute. MEXICO, Puebla, Mexico and

G.S. Tizapantzi, Instituto Politecnico Nacional,

Tlaxacala C. P., Mexico

T132 Assessment of parameters influencing the yeast acid treatment step in an ethanol fermentation process with cell recycling C.K. Yamakawa, E.A. Ccopa Rivera, W.E. Herrera

Agudelo*, M. Brant Wurthmann Saad, V. Coelho

Geraldo and C.E. Vaz Rossell, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory - Brazilian

Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CTBE/

CNPEM), Campinas, SP, Brazil; R. Maciel Filho, School

of Chemical Engineering, University of Campinas,

Campinas, SP, Brazil; A. Bonomi, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory (CTBE),

Campinas, SP, Brazil

T133 Screening of microorganisms for production of aggregated-value chemicals from glycerin bioconversion C. Bernardes Pereira, R. Miranda Carvalho da Silva

and C. G. Campos, University of Brasília, Brasília, DF,

Brazil; C. Madalozzo Poletto, J. Antonio de Aquino

Ribeiro, C. Martins Rodrigues, P. Verardi Abdelnur,

J.R. Moreira de Almeida* and M. Caramez Triches

Damaso, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, DF, Brazil

T134 Carbofrac®: case stories from a technology provider M.B. Pedersen* and R. Skovgaard-Petersen, BioGasol

ApS, Ballerup, Denmark

Page 53: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

53

Poster sessions

tues

day,

Apr

il 28

symPosium on Biotechnology for fuels And chemicAls 2015

T135 Hydrothermal microwave processing for corn residues as a pretreatment for xylo-oligosaccharides production in a biorefinery concept J. Velazquez, A. Lara, E. Zanuso and H.A. Ruiz*,

Autonomous University of Coahuila, Saltillo, Mexico

T136 Two-step acid-catalyzed conversion of Quercus mongolica into levulinic acid H.S. Jeong, S.K. Jang*, G.H. Ryu, C.Y. Hong, J.W. Choi

and I.G. Choi, Seoul National University, Seoul, South

Korea

T137 Comparative study of two standalone thermochemical routes for the production of electricity from sugarcane bagasse R. Neves, R. Silva and M. Rezende, Brazilian Bioethanol

Science and Technology Laboratory (CTBE),

Campinas, SP, Brazil; E. Medeiros, School of Chemical

Engineering, University of Campinas, Campinas;

B. Klein, L. Santos, R. Fre and E. Gómez, Brazilian

Bioethanol Science and Technology Laboratory

(CTBE), Campinas; R.M. Filho, School of Chemical

Engineering, State University of Campinas, Campinas,

Brazil; A. Bonomi*, Brazilian Bioethanol Science and

Technology Laboratory (CTBE), Campinas, Brazil

T138 Inbicon’s one stage steam pretreatment ensures high glucan and xylan conversion by allowing the main part of the inhibitory compounds to bypass the first phase of the hydrolysis K.K. Mogensen*, F. Gossmann, M.D. Jeppesen, L. Thirup

and J. Larsen, Dong Energy A/S, Fredericia, Denmark

T139 Pullulan production by Aureobasidium pullulans grown on a cordgrass hydrolysate containing primarily xylose D.E. Kennedy II and T.P. West*, South Dakota State

University, Brookings, SD

T140 Production of amylase by pathogen Rhizoctonia solani AG1 IA isolated from crop cultures under solid state fermentation using different carbon sources H. Ferreira Alves do Prado*, Univ Estadual Paulista -

UNESP - Campus de Ilha Solteira, Ilha Solteira - Sao

Paulo - Brazil, E. Aparecida de Oliveira Santos, Univ.

Estadual Paulista - UNESP - Campus de São José do

Rio Preto, São Jose do Rio Preto - Sao Paulo - Brazil, A.

Aparecida dos Reis, Univ. Estadual Paulista - UNESP

- Campus de São José do Rio Preto, Sao Jose do Rio

Preto - Sao Paulo - Brazil and P. Cesar Ceresini, Univ.

Estadual Paulista - UNESP - Campus de Ilha Solteira,

Ilha Solteira - Sao Paulo - Brazil

T141 Impact of oil palm fatal yellowing on Amazon soil archaeal community assessed by high-throughput sequencing D. Tupinamba and J.C. Bergmann, Universidade

Catolica de Brasilia, Brasilia, Brazil; M. Cantao,

Embrapa Swine and Poultry Research Center,

Concordia SC; O.Y. Costa, Universidade Catolica de

Brasilia, Brasilia; C. Kyaw, Universidade de Brasilia,

Brasilia; B. Quirino*, Embrapa Agroenergy, Brasília, DF,

Brazil

T142 High cell density fermentation of Escherichia coli using the Eppendorf BioFlo® 320 bioprocess control station B. Li*, Eppendorf, Inc., Enfiled, CT; K. Siddiquee and M.

Sha, Eppendorf, Inc., Enfield, CT

T143 Display of membrane proteins on the recombinant endosome induced by caveolin1 in Escherichia coli J. Shin, P. Heo, J.B. Park, Y. Jung*, D.H. Cho, B.J. Kong, J.

In and M. Park, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon-

si; D.H. Kweon, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon,

Republic of Korea

Page 54: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

54

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

auThor inDexaA . Silver, Pamela ST1-5

Abadie, Maider 15-2

Adamsen, Anders Peter S . 11-3

Adeboye, Peter Temitope T73

Adhikari, Birendra 12-2

Agblevor, Foster M11

Aghazadeh, Mahdieh M35

Agostini de Moraes, Mariana T11

Aguiar, Luís M . T32

Aguilar, Alejandra M33

Aguilar, Cristóbal M33

Ahmad, Farah T111

Ahmadiannamini, Pejman 12-1

Ahmed, Muhammad Azaj 5-6

Ahmed El-Imam, Amina 7-4

Aita, Giovanna M2, M23, M65, M143

Akinosho, Hannah M59, M121

Al-Dhabi, Naif Abdullah T119

Al-Rudainy, Basel M8

Alahuhta, Markus T59, T69

Aldrich, Joshua 8-4

Alessi, Anna M . M92

Allen, Eric E . 3-2

Almeida, João R . M . T55

Almeida e Silva, João Batista M17

Almqvist, Henrik T16

Alriksson, Björn 12-4

Alvarez, Thabata Maria M62

Alves, Madalena 2-1, T64

Alvira, Pablo 10-2

Amara, Sawsan 3-3

Ambye-Jensen, Morten 11-3

Amirsadeghi, Marta T114

Amorim, Henrique T89

Andberg, Martina 16-3

Anderson, Lars 8-5

Anderson, Lisa T46

Andrade, Ana Luisa David de T26

Andrade, Rafael Ramos de M78

Andrietta, Maria Graça Stupiello T53

Andrietta, Silvio Roberto T53

Antigo, Jessica M88

Antonio de Aquino Ribeiro, José T133

Antônio de Lima, Evandro M60

Antunes, Ana C . S . T55

Aparecida de Oliveira Santos, Erica T140

Aparecida dos Reis, Aline T140

Arantes, Valdeir 10, M20, M73, M81

Arcieri, Giuseppe M1

Aristizábal, Valentina T21

Arkell, Anders M8

Ashe, Mark 14-1

Asleson, Cathy 14

Assis, Leandro Henrique de Paula 15-1

Aston, John 4-3, M61

Athmanathan, Arun 5-5

Atsumi, Shota T35

Auer, Lucas 5-2, 15-2, 16-2

Avci, Utku M15

Avila-Lara, Abimael I . M22

Avina, Isaac M66

Avram, Alexandru 12-1

Azadi, Parastoo M152

bBabu, Thirumalaisamy T124

Bacon, Leann T98

Badino, Alberto Colli M112

Baker, Alex 13-6

Baker, David T93

Baker, John T113

Baker, John O . T59

Baker, Scott E . 16-1

Bakker, Rob M39

Bakker, Robert 2

Bakota, E .L . T17

Balan, Venkatesh 6-4, 13-4 M15, M52, M56, M91, M126, M132, T17, T82

Balch, Michael 3-6

Bale, Jacob T93

Ballesteros, Mercedes 10-2

Bals, Bryan D . 2-3, T63

Bansal, Namita 5-1

Bar-Even, Arren T93

Barcelos, Carolina Araujo T18

Bark, Gyeonghyae T116

Barreto, Cristine T45, T67

Barta, Zsolt M64, T39, T62

Basumallick, Lipika M7

Bates, Donna M51

Bathe, Brigitte 7-3

Beckerich, Jean-Marie T68

Beckham, Gregg T . 2-5, 8-5, M27, M71, M105 T13, T44

Bediako, D . Kwabena ST1-5

Beeson, William T . 8-6

Bellasio, Martina 6-7

Ben Chaabane, Fadhel 15-6

Bengtsson, Oskar ST2-4

Beraldo de Moraes, Luiz Alberto 15-5

Bergamasco, Rosangela M88

Bergeman, Lai 10-1

Bergmann, Jessica C . T45, T67, T141

Bergquist, Peter M80

Bernardes, Amanda M96, M98

Bernardes Pereira, Catarina T133

Page 55: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

55

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Berson, Eric M79

Betancourt, Ramiro T52

Bettiga, Maurizio 16, 6-5, T73

Bhagia, Samarthya M118, M121

Bhalla, Aditya 5-1

Bhattacharjee, Ananda T91

Bhattacharya, Abhishek M115

Biddy, Mary J . T44

Bird, Susannah M92

Black, Ian M152

Blackwell, Meredith 6-1

Blanch, Harvey W . 8-3

Blanquet, Senta T68

Block, David T65

Blomqvist, Johanna T112, T115

Boateng, Akwasi A . M76

Boles, Sara 2-3, T63

Bolton, Susan M106

Bomble, Yannick J . 3-7, M32, T113

Bommarius, Andreas S . M116

Bonicontro Ambrosio, Wesley M127, T121

Bonner, Ian J . 4-2, M29, M104

Bonomi, Antonio 14, 14-6, 17-7, M63, M84, M100, M127, M153T19 T37, T132, T137

Boopathy, Raj M138

Borden, Dustin M44

Bordignon, Sidnei M10

Borges, Elcio R . T66

Borges da Silva, Eduardo Alberto M122

Boscolo, Mauricio M10

Botelho Machado, Carla M60

Bott, Rick 8-7

Boundy-Mills, Kyria L . T46, T65

Bowman, Michael J . M52, M76, M77

Bozell, Joseph M32

Bozi, János M64

Braga, Cleiton M . P . M129

Brandenburg, Jule T112, T115

Brant Wurthmann Saad, Marcelo T132

Britt, R . David 8-6

Broering, James ST1-3

Brown, Steven D . M59, T91, T113

Bruce, Dale 2-3, M91

Bruce, Neil 8-5

Bruce, Neil C . M92

Brudecki, Grzegorz M31

Brummels, Tim 4-4

Brunecky, Roman 1-4

Brunner, Rick 17-1

Bruno, Kenneth S . T34

Bryan, Anthony C . 1-5

Bryant, David N 7-5

Bu, Lintao T13

Buddrus, Lisa M111

Budsberg, Erik L . M106, T31

Bura, Renata 18, 9-3, 11-7, M4, M106, T31, T96

Buser, Michael 4-2

But, Sergey 3-2

Butcher, Mark G . T8

CC . Way, Jeffery ST1-5

Cafferty, Kara M42, M57, M72, M104

Cai, Charles 12-5, 13-2, M26, M135

Cai, Pengli T41

Cajka, Tomas T46, T65

Cambareri, Ed 15-7

Camberos-Flores, Jesus N . M22

Camilo, Cesar M86

Campbell, Timothy J . 2-3

Campen, Saori 15-4

Campos, Eleonora M149

Cannella, David 7-7, M58

Cantao, Mauricio T67, T141

Cao, Guangli M151

Cao, Jing M143

Capelari Renzano, Eduardo T40

Cara, Cristobal T62

Caramez Triches Damaso, Mônica T133

Carazzolle, Macelo Falsarella T71

Cardona, Carlos Ariel T21, T52

Cardona, Maria J . 18-2

Cardoso, Vicelma T42

Care, Andrew M80

Carlos, Luiz Cláudio Souza T66

Carnevale, Massimo 2-4

Carpenter, Daniel T6

Carvalho, João Luís N . M84

Castro, Eulogio M47, T43, T62

Castro, Rafael C . A . M18, M131

Cate, Jamie H .D . 8-6

Cavalett, Otavio 17-7, M84, M100

Cavalier, David M51, M52

Cavka, Adnan 12-4

Cayetano, Roent Dune M19

Ccopa Rivera, Elmer Alberto M63, M127 T121, T132

Ceballos, Shannon T120, T122

Celestino, Jademilson M98

Cercado-Jaramillo, J .C . T92

Cesar Ceresini, Paulo T140

Chagas, Mateus F . M84, M100

Chandolias, Konstantinos 18-5

Chandra, Richard P . 9-7, M20

Chang, Hou-min 9-2

Chen, Jay 1-5

Chen, Liqun M71

Chen, Xiaowen 5-4, M25, M41

Chen, Ye M3

Chen, Yingying T99

Cheng, Jinlan 9-1

Cheng, Yu-Shen M9, M53, T90

Cherry, Joel 17-5

Page 56: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

56

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Cherry, Robert 4-3

Chin, Wei Shan T31

Chmely, Stephen 4-6

Cho, Da-Hyeong T143

Cho, Seung Sik M95

Choi, Eunji T116

Choi, Han Suk T56, T101

Choi, In-Geol T12

Choi, In-Gyu M12, T1, T27, T136

Choi, Joon Weon T136

Choi, Myung Suk M38, M130

Choi, Sun-A T117

Chou, Tzung-Han M9, M53

Christakopoulos, Paul 7-2, M117

Chun, Jaesung M97

Chundawat, Shishir P .S . M52

Chung, Daehwan 3-7, T88

Clark, Doug 8-3

Claypool, Joshua T . T100

Cockx, Arnaud 18-3, M16

Coelho Geraldo, Victor M63, T132

Coffman, Phillip 11-4

Collett, James R T8

Colón, Brendan ST1-5

Contuzzi, Luca 2-4

Cooley, Grace ST1-3

Corley, Frank 11-2

Cort, John R . 3-4

Cortez, Marnie M68

Costa, Aline C . T26

Costa, Aline Carvalho da M101

Costa, Caliane B . B . M93

Costa, Carolina Brás M128

Costa, Isabela Almeida Lima T51

Costa, Ohana Yonara T45, T67, T141

Costa, Patricia dos Santos M101, M128, M147

Costa, Thales HF 4-1

Cota, Junio M99, M150

Cotta, Michael A . M76, M151, T17

Cragg, Simon 8-5

Crawford, Jordan T . M106, T31

Creamer, Kurt ST1-3

Crowe, Jacob 1-2, M28

Crowley, Michael M32, M71, M105

Cruz, Antonio J . G . M93, M145

Cruz, Consuelo M46

Cuadrado, Nazaret M98

Cuadros Bohórquez, José Fernando T37

Cuellar, Maria C . 12-6, M74, M94

Culley, David E . T34

Cybulska, Iwona M31

Czégény, Zsuzsanna M64

DDa-Silva, Roberto M10, T89

da Costa Sousa, Leonardo M52

Dai, Ziyu T8, T34

Dale, Bruce E . 6-4, 11-1, 13-4 M15, M52, M56, M126, M132, T17, T82

Damásio, André R . L . 15-5, M99, M150

Damaso, Mônica Caramez Triches M149

Danson, Michael J . M111, T98

Dasari, Raj 18

da Silva, Silvio Silverio M40

Daubaras, Dayna L . 4-2, 11-6, M37, M57, M72

Davies, E . Tim M37

Davis, Mark 1-6, 3-6, M71, M83

Davis, Ryan W T77

Davison, Brian H . 3-6, M59, T91

Day, Donal 12-7, T74

de Araújo, Ana Carolina Bitencourt M102

de Bruijn, Hans T79

de Carli, Chanel Moacyr M141

Decker, Stephen R . 8-5, M32, T59, T84, T113

Deepti, Tanjore 12

de França Bisol, Andressa M122

Delabona, Priscila da Silva M101, M128, M129, M147

de la Cerna-Hernández, C . T75

Delezene-Briggs, Karen M61

de Melo, Itamar Soares M102

Demirci, Ali 14-7, M55

Demuez, Marie 10-2

Deng, Fang M65

Deng, Shuang T34

den Haan, Riaan 6-2

Denzel, Evelyn 15-4

Derlot, Claire T68

Desai, Shuchi T35

Desiniotis, Andreas T130

Dhawan, Samriti M120

Diallo, Oumou M11

Dias, Marina 14-6

Diaz, Nick ST2-5

Diaz-Salazar, Carlos 3-3

Dien, B .S . T17

Dien, Bruce S . M76, M77

Dienes, Dora T49

DiFazio, Stephen 1-5

Ding, Shi-You M75

Diogo, José M99

Diogo, Jose Alberto M90, M150

Dionisio, Suzane R . T26

Doherty, William T111

Dolstra, Oene 1-7

Donaldson, Janet T114

Donohoe, Bryon 1-4, 1-6, 3-6

Dou, Chang 11-7, M4

Dowdy, Ryan T70

Dowe, Nancy M41, M142, T44, T85

Du, Chenyu 7-4

Dumas, Claire 15-2

Dumitrache, Alexandru M59

Page 57: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

57

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Dussán, Kelly Johana M17, M40

Dyer, Paul 7-4

eEaton, Laurence M . M104

Ebrahim, Ali 8-5

Eby, Joseph 7-6

Edye, Les 13-6

Eggink, Gerrit M39

Ehsanipour, Mandana T96

Eibinger, Manuel 10-7

Eijsink, Vincent G .H . 8-1, 10-6

Eilert, Dustin M51

Elander, Richard T . 5-4

Elkins, James G . T87, T88

Elleskov, Michael 14-3

Eltis, Lindsay D . 3-3, 15-3

Emerson, Rachel M . 11-6, M68, T6

Emme, Brandon 17, 17-1

Enejder, Annika M49

Engelberth, Abigail S . M35, T20

Engle, Nancy L . T87

Enman, Josefine T104

Eom, In-Yong T54

Erdei, Borbala 17-3

Eriksen, Carl Henrik 14-3

Eriksson, Leif A 6-5

Escamilla, Eleazar M56

Eudes, Aymerick 4-1

Evangelista, R .L . T17

Evans, John 17

Evans, Luke 1-5

Evans, Tabitha T13

Ewanick, Shannon 11-7

fFang, Chuanji M31

Fang, Xu M48

Faria, Cristiana 2-1

Farinas, Cristiane Sanchez M112, M129, M148

Farquhar, Erik R . 8-6

Farris, Rodney M68

Fasina, Oladiran 11-2

Favaro, Léia Cecília de Lima M102

Fehér, Csaba T39, T62

Fei, Qiang T85

Felby, Claus 1-3, 7-7, M58

Feldman, Taya M37

Felipe, Maria das Graças Almeida M17, M40, T51

Feng, Kai 1-5

Feng, Xueyang T99

Fernández, Marco T . M47

Fernandez-Fuentes, Narcis 7-5

Fernández-Sandoval, Marco T . T43

Fernandez Dacosta, Cora M94

Ferraz, André 4-1, M5, M153

Ferreira, Eugénio C . T32

Ferreira, Isabela S . M18, M131

Ferreira Alves do Prado, Heloiza T140

Ferreira Ribeiro, Lucas 15-5

Fewings, Rebecca 8-5

Fiehn, Oliver 16-6, T46, T65, T86

Filho, Rubens Maciel M84, T123, T137

Flickinger, Michael C . 18-6

Florencio, Camila M112

Flores-Gomez, Carlos A . 13-4

Flores-Gómez, Carlos Alberto M56

Fonseca, Bruno G . M18, M131

Fonseca, Gabriel C . M93

Foody, Brian ST2-1

Forsberg, Zarah 8-1

Fox, Brian 10-1, M52

Franco Cairo, João Paulo M62

Franden, Mary Ann 2-5

Frankær, Christian M31

Frankó, Balázs M133, T47

Franz, Annaliese T46

Franzén, Carl Johan 14-5, T7

Frazer, Sarah M151

Fre, Rodrigo T137

French, Todd T114

Fujii, Tatsuya M89

Fujimoto, Hirohisa T80

Furtado, Gilvan 15-5

Furtado, Guilherme M74

gG . Campos, Christiane T133

G . Nocera, Daniel ST1-5

Gal, Boglarka T39

Galbe, Mats 17-3, M14, M70, M133, T47, T49

Gales, Amandine 15-2

Gallagher, Joe A 7-5

Gallagher, Tom 11-2

Gallardo, Roberto 2-1

Ganner, Thomas 10-7

Gao, Liwei 16-7

Garay, Luis T46, T65

García, carlos Andrés T52

Gardner, James 11-4

Garrote, Gil M33

Gasch, Audrey P . 6-6

Ge, Si-Chi T90

Geijer, Cecilia T4

Genheden, Samuel 6-5

Gerken, Christopher R .W . 9-5, 17-1

German, Bruce T46, T65

Giannis, Apostolos 5-3

Ginesy, Mireille 7-2, T104

Giordano, Raquel L . C . M148

Gjersing, Erica 1-6, 3-6

Gladden, John M . 15-4, 16-1, T23

Gladen, Shannon 15-7

Gleisner, Roland 9-1

Page 58: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

58

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Godon, Jean-Jacques 15-2

Godoy, Andre M86

Goedegebuur, Frits 8-2

Goel, Ramesh T91

Göker, Markus 6-1

Goldbeck, Rosana T71

Gomes, Eleni M10, T89

Gomes, Lorena Ferreira M149

Gómez, Edgardo T137

Goméz, Edgardo Olivares 17-7

Gomez Peña, Alvaro T21

Gonçalves, Bruna T97

Gonçalves, Silvia B . T55

Gonçalves, Thiago Augusto M62

González-Fernández, Cristina 10-2

Goodwin, Peter M . M103

Gossmann, Frederike T138

Goudarzi, Azadeh 15-3

Gourlay, Keith 14-4, M20, M81

Gouvêia, Vera L . R . M84, T37

Grant, Christopher 14-1

Green, Terry M3

Gresham, Garold L . 11-4

Grigoriev, Igor 6-1

Groban, Eli 3-1

Groom, Joseph 3-7

Guan, Wenjian T30

Guarnieri, Michael T . 2-5

Gudmundsson, Mikael 8-7

Guillaume, Anais M54

Gunawan, Christa M56, M126, M132

Gunter, Lee E . 1-5

Guseva, Anna 3-6

Guss, Adam M . M107, T125

Gustafson, Rick 11-7, M106, T31

hHa, Si Young M38, M130

Hahm, Johnnie ST1-3

Hahn, Michael G . 3-6, 3-7, 10-1, M15

Hamilton, Choo 4-6

Hammer, Sarah 3-6

Han, Jong-In 5-6

Han, Lijuan M48

Han, Lujia T28

Han, SungOk T109

Hanly, Timothy ST1-2, T81

Hansson, Henrik 8-2, 8-7, M67

Happs, Renee M71

Haridas, Sajeet 6-1

Haris, Sabeera T48

Harris, Paul ST1-3

Harrold, Duff M119, T122

Harumi Sato, Helia M60

Hasani, Sumati ST1-3

Hawley, Erik R . T8

Haydon, Ian ST1-3

He, Qian 13-1

Heeres, Arjan S . 12-6

Hegg, Eric L . 5-1

Heijnen, Sef 12-6

Heo, Paul T143

Heo, Sun-Yeon T128

Heo, Ung M85

Hernández, Andrés Felipe T51

Hernandez-Raquet, Guillermina 5-2, 15-2, 16-2 T114

Herrera Agudelo, William Eduardo M63 , T132

Heu, Tia ST1-3

Higbee, Alan 6-4

Higgins, Brendan T . 16-6, T86

Higgins, Douglas A . T29

Himmel, Michael E . 1-4, 3-7, 8-5, 14-2 M105, M32, M75, T5, T59, T69, T84, T113

Himmel, Mike 5-4

Hiras, Jennifer 8-4, 15-4

Hittinger, Chris T . 6-1, 6-6

Hobdey, Sarah E . 8-5, M32

Hodge, David B . 1-2, 5-1, M28, T36

Hoefling, Ryan 17-1

Hoffman, Zaira Bruna 15-1, M99, M150

Holtzapple, Mark T . 5 , 10-3

Hong, Chang-Young M12, T1, T27, T136

Hong, Soo-Jeong T116

Hong, Won-Kyung T128

Honorato, Rodrigo Vargas 15-1

Hoover, Amber 11-6, M57, M68

Hopkins, Thutam M44

Horn, Svein Jarle 8-1, 10-6

Hoshino, Tamotsu T78

Hoss Lunelli, Betânia M140

Howe, Daniel T6

Hsieh, Chia-wen C . 1-3, M58

Hu, Jinguang M20, M73

Huang, Chih-Hao M9

Huang, Hong Z . 10-5

Hudebine, Damien M123

Humpula, James F . M132

Huron, Maïté M123

Hvid Andersen, Thomas 6-3

Hwang, Hee Jin T83, T118

Hyeon, JeongEun T109

iIbarra, David 10-2

Ibraim Pires Atala, Daniel M127, T121

Ienczak, Jaciane L . T26, T40

Ikeuchi, Akinori T94

Ilmén, Marja 16-3

Imamura, Chie T94

In, Junghoon T143

Ingram, Lonnie O . M47, T43

Inoue, Hiroyuki 15, M89

Ishida, Nobuhiro T94

Page 59: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

59

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Ishikawa, Kazuhiko M89

Islas-Romero, L .M . T92

Izmirlioglu, Gulten 14-7, M55

JJ . Gagliardi, Christopher ST1-5

Jabusch, Lauren K . T86

Jacobs, Jon 8-4

Jadhav, Sachin 2-3, T63

Jakab, Emma M64

Jameel, Hasan 9-2

Jang, Soo-Kyeong M12, T1, T27, T136

Japs, Michael 17-6

Jaramillo, Lizeth T66

Javers, Jeremy E . 17-1

Jawdy, Sara 1-5

Jeffries, Thomas W . 6-1

Jehmlich, Nico 16-2

Jennings, Ed 5-4, M41

Jensen, Anders 7-7

Jensen, Anker Degn 7-7

Jensen, Rasmus 17-4

Jensen, Søren Krogh 11-3

Jensen, Vinni Kragbæk Damborg 11-3

Jeoh, Tina 15, 18-2, M87, M103, M109

Jeon, Seung Taeg M85

Jeong, Han-Seob M12, T1, T27, T136

Jeong, Myung-Joon M21

Jeppesen, Martin D . T138

Jesus, Charles D . F . M84, T37

Jiang, Yang M94

Jin, M . T17

Jin, Mingjie 6-4, M52, M126, T82

Jo, Yong-Han T107

Joelsson, Elisabeth 17-3

Johansen, Katja S . 10-5

Johnson, Christopher W . 2-5

Johnson, David K . M75, T9, T60

John Ward, Richard M60

Jones, A . Daniel T82

Jones, Aubrey ST1-3

Jones, Brandon 9-2

Jones, Susanne T8

Jönsson, Leif J . 12-4, 13-3

Jorge, Rita C . T32

Jørgensen, Henning M58

Joshi, Rajasi V . T126

Joshua, chijioke J . T10

Jourdier, Etienne 15-6

Juang, Ruey-Shin T108

Jung, Gyoo Yeol ST1-6

Jung, Ji young M38, M130

Jung, Younghun T143

Junqueira, Tassia L . M84

Junqueira, Tassia Lopes 17-7

kKallenbach, Robert M68

Kalyuzhnaya, Marina 3-2

Kandemkavil, Sindhu 10-1

Kang, Hyun Jun T83

Kang, Kyu-Young M21

Kang, Yuzhi M116

Kaper, Thijs 10, 8-7

Karatzos, Sergios 14-4

Karkehabadi, Saeid 8-2, 8-7

Karlström, Katarina M49

Karnaouri, Anthi M117

Karp, Eric 2-5

Karuna, Nardrapee 18-2, M87

Kastelowitz, Noah M32

Kataeva, Irina M47

Katahira, Rui M27

Katahira, Satoshi T94

Kataoka, Misumi M89

Kaur, Ramandeep M120

Kaur*, Jagdeep M120

Kawamoto, Tatsushi T94

Kennedy II, Daniel E . T139

Kenney, Kevin L . 11-4

Kent, Michael M66

Kibblewhite, Rena M110

Kikuta, Hirokazu T94

Kim, Bo-Mee T76

Kim, Chul Ho T128

Kim, Daehwan M125, M151

Kim, Do Hyoung M154

Kim, Dong Sup T56

Kim, Dong Young M36

Kim, Hee-Sik T117

Kim, Hee Taek T124

Kim, Hyo Jin T116

Kim, Ilgook 5-6

Kim, In Jung M114

Kim, Ji-Su M38, M130

Kim, Jin-Woo T116

Kim, Jina T116

Kim, Jin Ho T83, T118

Kim, JunBeom M134, M136

Kim, Jun Seok M19, M134, M136

Kim, Keonhee 4-6

Kim, Kyoung Heon 9, M69, M114, M154, T12, T124

Kim, Seonah T13

Kim, Seungdo 11-1

Kim, Seung Wook M95, T56, T101

Kim, Soo-Jung T107

Kim, Sooah T124

Kim, Sun-Ki M85

Kim, Sung Bong T56

Kim, Tae Hyun M19, M36

Kim, Yong Seon T25

Kim, Youngmi M34

Kimbrel, Jeff 15-4

Page 60: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

60

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Kimura, Zen-ichiro T78

Kind, Tobias 16-6

Kirby, James M83

Kishishita, Seiichiro M89

Kiskis, Juris M49

Klaassen, Paul T79

Klasson, K . Thomas T106

Kleerebezem, Robbert M94

Klein, Bruno T137

Klein-Marcuschamer, Daniel 11-4, T50

Klenk, Hans-Peter 6-1

Klepac, John 11-2

Klepac, Micheal M44

Klinchan, Sopa T103

Klingensmith, June M142

Kneale, Geoff 8-5

Knott, Brandon 8

Knott, Brandon C . M105

Ko, Ja Kyong M34

Koivistoinen, Outi 16-3

Koivula, Anu 16-3

Koivuranta, Kari 16-3

Kolling, Daniel M128, M141, M147

Komesu, Andrea M140

Konda, N .V .S .N . Murthy 11-4, T50

Kong, Byoung-jae T143

Kongruang, Sasithorn T103, T105

Koolloos, Christian T79

Kostetsky, Eduard M98

Kostylev, Maxim ST1-2, T81

Kothari, Ninad M30

Koudelka, John M104

Kouvelis, Vassili T130

Kovacs, Krisztina T49

Kreke, Thomas M34, M125

Kroukamp, Heinrich 6-2

Kruger, Ricardo H . T45

Kuhn, Erik M . 5-4, M13, M25, M41

Kuivanen, Joosu 16-3

Kumagai, Akio M89

Kumar, Rajeev 9, 12-5, 13-2 M6, M26, M30, M118, M121, M135

Kurtzman, C .P . T17

Kurtzman, Cletus 6-1

Kweon, Dae-Hyuk T76, T143

Kwok, Thomas M116

Kyaw, Cynthia T45, T67, T141

lLabavitch, John M . T86

Labbé, Nicole 4-6, T72

Lacey, Jeffrey M68

Lacey, Jeffrey A . 4-3, M61

Ladisch, Michael M10, M34, M112 M124, M125, M151

Lamsa, Michael ST1-3

Lanahan, Anthony T110

Landick, Robert 6-6

Lara, Anely T135

Laranja, Marcio M10

Larenas, Edmund 8-2

Larsen, Jan 14-3, T138

Larsson, Tomas M49

Lash, Terry 5-5

Laurens, Lieve T95

Lazuka, Adèle 5-2, 15-2, 16-2

Leak, David J . M111, T98

Lebaz, Noureddine 18-3, M16

Lee, Charles M110

Lee, Dae-Hee T116

Lee, Do-Yup T107

Lee, Gye-An T117

Lee, Hye-Jin T107

Lee, Hyoung-Min T38

Lee, Hyun-Su T76

Lee, Hyung Ho M85

Lee, Ja Hyun M95, T101

Lee, Jin-Suk M136, T117

Lee, Ju Hun M95

Lee, Jun Ho T83

Lee, Marcela Oliveira M128

Lee, Pyung Cheon T83, T118

Lee, Saeyoung T12

Lee, Sang Jun T56

Lee, Soo Kweon M95

Lee, Tae Ho M97

Lee, Y .Y . T30

Leu, Shao-Yuan 9-1

Lew, Wilson T129

Li, Bin T142

Li, Chenlin 11-4, 13-1, 13-7, M42

Li, Linmei 3-4

Li, Muyang 1-2, M28

Li, Xin 9-5

Li, Zhenglun 5-1, T15

Li, Zhonghai 16-7

Lian, Jieni T22

Liang, Ling 13-1

Liang, Shu-Chien 2

Liao, Wei M144

Liberato, Marcelo Vizoná M62

Lidén, Gunnar T16

Lidstrom, Mary E . 3-2, T93

Lim, Hyun Gyu ST1-6

Lim, Jae Hyung ST1-6

Lima, Deise Juliana da Silva M101, M128, M147

Lima, Mariana M96

Lin, Janine ST1-3

Lindahl, Lina 6-5

Lindlbauer, Katharina T102

Linger, Jeffrey ST1, 2-5, T84

Lischeske, James M108, T24

Liu, Amy 8-7

Page 61: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

61

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Liu, Fang ST1-3

Liu, Jim 10-5, M3

Liu, Yan M144

Liu, Zhiguo M144

Lo, Jonathan M107, T110

Lopes, Mario T89

Lopes da Cunha, Rosiane M74

Lopes Ferreira, Nicolas M123

Loque, Dominique ST1-4

Lorizolla Cordeiro, Rosa 15-5

Lourenzoni, Marcos Roberto 15-5

Lovelady, April 12-7

Lowell, Andrew T85

Loza-Valerdi, E .M . T92

Lu, May-Ling M43, M139

Luong, Tina 13-1

Lutzke, Vanessa 13-2

Lynch, Michael 3-5

Lynd, Lee 3-6, M107, T87, T110, T113, T125

Lynn, Jed 16-1

mM . Mendes, Fernanda M153

M . Vasconcellos, Vanessa M148

Machado, Carla M99

Maciel Filho, Rubens 14-6, 17-7 M63, M78, M140, T19, T132

Madalozzo Poletto, Carolina T133

Madrona, Grasiele M88, T42

Madson, Philip W . ST2-6

Magnuson, Jon 15-4, 16-1, T8, T34

Maia, Alana M . M . M18, M131

Malburg, Laercio 17-1

Mallinson, Sam 8-5

Malmali, Mohammadmahdi 18-1

Manns, Dirk 4-5

Mansfield, Elisabeth M32

Margeot, Antoine 15-6

Mariano, Adriano 14-6

Marinha, Mariana I . T32

Marletta, Michael A . 8-6

Martín Medina, Carlos 12-4, 13-3, M113

Martins, Maria Inês T42

Martins Martinez, Patrícia M140

Martins Rodrigues, Clenilson T133

Marx, Hans 2-7, 6-7, T102

Masumi Beppu, Marisa T11

Mathis, Hugues T68

Mathur, Eric ST1-1

Matsakas, Leonidas M117

Matsushita, Hibiki T94

Mattanovich, Diethard 6-7, 16-4, T102

Maugeri Filho, Francisco T71

McCarthy, Michael J . 18-2

McCluskey, Kevin 16-1

McColm, Stephen T3

McCormick, Margaret 16-5

McDonald, Timothy 11-2

McGeehan, John 8-5

McKinney, Kellene M27

McMillan, Jim ST2

McNunn, Gabe M104

McPherson, Nikolas R . T127

McQueen-Mason, Simon 8-5, M92

Medeiros, Elisa T137

Meilan, Richard M75

Mello, Bruno Luan M92

Mendes, Thais Demarchi M102, M149

Mendonça, Marcela S . M18, M131

Menon, Ajay 5-3

Mertens, Jeffrey A . M77

Meyer, Aye T8

Michelin, Michele M124

Mihle, Ashley M106

Mikkelsen, NilsEgil 8-7

Mikova, Gizela M94

Milagres, Adriane A . M . F . M82

Milagres, Adriane M . F . 4-1, M153

Miller, William M142

Min, Won-Ki M85

Miner, Matthew T15

Miranda, Julio M78

Miranda Carvalho da Silva, Ricardo T133

Mitchell, Dana 11-2

Mitchell, Robert B . M76

Mitchinson, Colin 8-2

Mittal, Ashutosh 4, M27, T60

Modl, Josef 2-7, T102

Mogensen, Kit K . T138

Mohagheghi, Ali T44

Mohnen, Debra 3-7

Mojzita, Dominik 16-3

Momeni, Majid Haddad 8-2, M67

Monclaro, Antonielle Vieira M62

Monot, Frederic 15-6

Moon, Young Hwan T74

Moraes, Elisangela de Jesus Candido M17

Morales Vera, Rodrigo 9-3, 11-7

Morchain, Jérôme 18-3, M16

Moreira, João M78

Moreira de Almeida, João Ricardo T133

Moreno, Antonio D . 10-2, T4

Morgan, Hannah T31

Mori, Naila 11-7

Mörtsell, Marlene 12-4

Moser, B .R . T17

Mosier, Nathan M75, T28

Mou, Duen G . 18-4

Muchero, Wellington 1

Mudinoor, Akshata M103, M109

Mukarakate, Calvin T13

Müller, Gerdt 10-6

Page 62: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

62

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Mullikin, Ronald ST1-3

Muniz, Joao M96, M98

Murakami, Katsuji T78

Murakami, Mario Tyago 15-1, 15-5 M90, M99, M150

Muraleedharan, Madhu Nair M117

Mussatto, Solange I . M146, T32

Muth Jr ., David M104

nNadia, Cerone 2-4

Nag, Ambarish M108, T95

Nagane, Nikhil M26

Nagle, Nick J . 11-5, M57, M72

Nagura, Risa T94

Nam, Bora T117

Nam, Jeong Bin M38, M130

Naran, Radnaa M152

Narani, Akash 11-4, 13-1, M42

Nelson, Robert M41

Netto, Osmar V . C . T71

Neuhauser, Michaela T16

Neves, Renato 17-7, T137

Nguyen, Thanh Yen 12-5, 13-2

Ngyuen, Quang ST2-3

Nichols, Nancy N . M151

Nicol, Willie T44

Nicora, Carrie 8-4

Nidetzky, Bernd 10-7, 18-7

Nielsen, Alex T57

Nielsen, Fredrik M70

Nielsen, Joachim Bachmann 7-7

Nielson, Chandra D . T63

Nieves, Ismael U . M47, T43

Nikolaev, Igor 8-7

Nimlos, Mark R . T13

Nolasco Junior, Jonas T121

Noseda, Miguel M122

Novy, Vera 18-7

Nygård, Yvonne 16-3

oO’Brien, Marykate 5-4, M13, M25, M41

O’Bryan, P . T17

O’Donohue, Michael 5-2, 15-2, 16-2

O’Hara, Ian M . T111

O . S . Dias, Marina M153

Ocaranza, Erik T75

Ochrombel, Ines 7-3

Oh, BaekRcok T128

Oh, Kyeong Keun M19, M36

Oh, Soon Hwan T118

Oh, Young-Hoon T54

Ohta, Kazuyoshi T80

Oja, Merja 16-3

Oladi, Saeed M23

Oliva-Taravilla, Alfredo 10-2

Oliveira, Johnatt M140

Oliveira, Paulo Sergio Lopez 15-1

Oliveira, Regiane Alves T123

Oliveira de Souza Dias, Marina T19

Olofsson, Kim 6, 6-3

Ølshøj Jensen, Torbjørn T57

Olson, Daniel M107, T110, T113, T125

Olsson, Johanna M8

Olsson, Lisbeth 6-5, 14-5, M49, T4, T7, T73

Ong, Rebecca Garlock M51

Onishi, Toru T94

Orjuela, Andrea M91, T17

Orozco, Yohanna Cabrera 7-7

Orrego, David M125

Orts, William M110

Ouyang, Hanlin 10-5

pP .C . Pereira, Joana T33

P . Torella, Joseph ST1-5

Paavola, Chad M110

Pace, Sara T122

Pacheco, Rachel ST2-5

Pacheco, Thályta Fraga M149, T55

Paixão, Douglas A . A . M62

Pallapolu, Venkata Ramesh T30

Pan, Xuejun 2-2

Pan, Zhongli T46

Papa, Gabriella M83, T50

Papanek, Beth T125

Pappas, Katherine M . 3, T130

Park, Ah Reum T25

Park, Charnho T101

Park, Chulhwan T56, T101

Park, Don-Hee T38

Park, Jae-Hee T38

Park, Jang Han M134, M136

Park, Ji-Yeon T117

Park, Jin-Byung T107

Park, Jun-Bum T143

Park, Junyeong 9-2

Park, Kyungmoon T107

Park, Myungseo T143

Park, Se-Yeong M12, T1, T27

Park, Seok-Hwan T38

Park, Seong Jik T25

Park, Sunkyu 9-2

Park, Yong-Cheol M85, T76, T107

Park, Yong Cheol M134, M136

Passoth, Volkmar T112, T115

Paton, Robert S . T13

Patri, Abhishek M135

Pattathil, Sivakumar 4, 3-6, 10-1, M15, M126

Paulillo, Silene T89

Page 63: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

63

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Paye, Julie 3-6

Payne, Courtney M45, M68

Peciulyte, Ausra M49

Pedersen, Mads Berthinus 9-4, T134

Pel, Herman 17-2, T79

Pellegrini, Vanessa de Oliveira Arnoldi 10-4

Pellegrino, John 12, 12-2

Penttilä, Merja 16-3

Pereira, Ana Luisa T64

Pereira, Gonçalo Amarante Guimarães T71

Pereira, Lucas 14-6

Pereira, Lucas G . T19

Pereira, Nei T18, T66

Peretti, Steven W . 7-6

Perez, Jose Antonio 13

Perez-Pimienta, Jose A . 13-4, M22

Persaud, Krishna 14-1

Pessoa, Fernando L . Pellegrini T18

Peter, Gary M83

Pfeiffer, Katherine 8-3

Pflügl, Stefan T102

Pham-Bugayong, Patrisha J . M2, M65

Pham Thi Thu, Huong M19

Phillips, Christopher M . 8-6

Phillips, Richard 9-2

Phongpreecha, Thanaphong T36

Pickova, Jana T112, T115

Picone, Carolina M74

Pilath, Heidi M . T60

Piotrowski, Jeff 6-4, M51

Plank, Harald 10-7

Plazas Tovar, Laura M63

Pletschke, Brett I . M115

Podkaminer, Kara 8-5, T113

Pohlmann, Edward M51

Polikarpov, Igor 10-4, M86, M92, M96, M98

Polizeli, Maria de Lourdes Teixeira de Moraes 15-5, M124

Polsky, Ronan M66

Polston, Angela M44

Ponce, Gustavo M78

Posada, John A . M94

Potthast, Antje M21

Poust, Sean T93

Powell, Robert L . 18-2

Pradella, José Geraldo da Cruz M101, M128, M129, M141, M147, T40

Pratto, Bruna M145

Pray, Todd 11-4, 13-1, 13-7, 15-4, M42

Priefert, Horst 7-3

Pu, Yunqiao M50

Puls, Jürgen M113

Putnam, Lorraine 9-5

Qian, Xianghong 7-1, 12-1, 13-5, 18-1

Qu, Yinbo 16-7

Quirino, Betania T45, T67, T141

Quirino, Betania Ferraz M102

rRabelo, Sarita C . M141, T40

Rabinovitch-Deere, Christine T35

Rader, Nadeya M66

Ragauskas, Arthur M50, M59, M121

Rahman, Siti Fauziyah T38

Rahnert, Maria 7-3

Rajnai, Eszter M64

Ramirez, Andrea M94

Ramos Robles, Maria Isabel T131

Rane, Kishore M3

Rao, Kripa M44

Rao Ravella, Sreenivas 7-5

Ratnaparkhe, Supriya 10-1

Ray, Allison E . 4-2, 11-6, M57, M68, M72

Realff, Matthew J . M116

Red Corn, Raymond T20

Redl, Stephanie T57

Reed, David W . M37

Reid, Peter 14-1

Reis, Miria M88, T42

Ren, Fei 5-3

Resch, Michael M32, M71, T113

Reyes-Cervantes, E . T75

Rezende, Mylene 17-7, T137

Riaño-Pachón, Diego Mauricio M92

Ribeiro Gaspar, Armindo M122

Richard, Peter 16-3

Richard, Tom M91

Ricken, Bryce M66

Riley, Robert 6-1

Roberto, Inês C . M18, M131

Roberts, Jim 16-5

Robichaud, David T13

Robinson, Errol 8-4

Robl, Diogo M147

Roccor, Raphael 3-3

Rodrigues, Dasciana de Sousa M102

Rodrigues, Gisele Nunes M128, M129

Rodrigues, Lígia Raquel 2-1

Rodrigues, Maria Isabel T53

Rodriguez, Miguel M59, T91

Rogers, Luke M106

Rohrer, Jeffrey M7

Roig, Manuel M98

Roland, Cécile 5-2

Romaní, Aloia M33

Romero, Rodolfo A . 12-3

Romero-García, Juan M . T62

Rondon, Vanessa M47

Rønnow, Birgitte 6-3

Roque, Laerti Reis T26

Roslander, Christian M14

Round, James W . 15-3

Rova, Ulrika 7-2, M117, T104

Page 64: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

64

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Roytrakul, Sittiruk T105

Rozhkova, Alexandra M113

Ruan, Hao 2-6, T58

Rubio-Rosas, Efraín T75

Ruegg, Thomas L . T29

Ruiz, Héctor A . 13-4, M33, T135

Ruiz-Font, Angelica del C . T131

Ruiz-Ramos, Encarnacion T62

Ruller, Roberto 15-1, M60, M90, M99, M150

Rummer, Robert B . 11-2

Ruohonen, Laura 16-3

Ryan, Clare M106

Ryu, Ga-Hee T27, T136

Ryu, Hyun Jin M36

Ryu, Seunghyun T72

sS . Chen, Janice ST1-5

Saddler, Jack ST2, 9-7, 14-4, M20, M73, M81

Sagues, William J . M47, T43

Salamov, Asaf 6-1

Sale, Kenneth L . M37, M66

Salmon, Kirsty 6

Salum, Thaís Fabiana Chan M102, M149

Salvachua, Davinia 2-5, T44

Sammond, Deanne W . M32

Sanchez-Weatherby, Juan 8-5

Sander, Kyle B . T91

Sanders, Karyn 2-3

Sandgren, Mats 8-2, 8-7, M67, T112, T115

Sanford, Gregg M51

Sang, Byoung-In M97

Santa Anna, Lidia Maria Melo T66

Santos, Alberdan Silva M128

Santos, Camila Ramos 15-1, 15-5

Santos, Hilton T . L . M18, M131

Santos, Júlio C . M153

Santos, Luana T137

Santos, Samantha C . T26

Saqib, Abdul A . N . M37

Sarks, Cory 2-3, 6-4, T82

Sathitsuksanoh, Noppadon 13-4, 13-7, M42

Sathitsuksanoh, Noppandon M66

Sato, Trey K . 6-4, 6-6, T29

Sauer, Michael 2-7, 6-7, 16-4, T102

Saville, Bradley A . 4-4

Scapim, Monica M88

Schaller, Kastli M57

Schell, Daniel J . 5-4, M13, T24

Scheller, Henrik V . 4-1

Schmidt, Jens Ejbye M31

Schneeberger, Richard M44

Schnorr, Kirk 8-5

Schulte, Mark J . 18-6

Schuster, Logan T84

Schwegmann, Stefan 2-3, T63

Sebestyén, Zoltán M64

Seghezzi, Nicolas 3-3

Seiboth, Bernhard M129

Selig, Michael 1-3

Seo, Jeong-Woo T128

Seo, Jin-Ho M85, T116

Serapiglia, Michelle M76

Serate, Jose M51

Serpa Muller, Viviane M122

Sha, Ma T142

Shao, Xiongjun T87

Shekiro, Joe 5-4, M25, T24

Shields-Menard, Sara A . T114

Shin, Jonghyeok T143

Shnyrov, Valery M98

Sibbesen, Ole 6-3

Siddiquee, Khandaker T142

Siegel, Justin T93

Sievers, David 9-6, 12-2, T24

Silva, Daniele T66

Silva, Debora Danielle Virginio M17, M40

Silva, Diego Arthur de Morais M149

Silva, Ricardo 17-7, T137

Silva, Sílvio Silvério da T97

Silva-Villanueva, L .C . T92

Silveira Santos Martins, Danielle T66

Silverman, Heather M72

Simmons, Blake 8-4, 11-4, 13-1, 13-4, 13-7 15-4, 16-1, M42, M66, M83 T10, T29, T50, T100, T122

Simmons, Christopher W . T46, T70, T100

Singer, Steven 8-4, 15-4, T29

Singer, Steven W . T10, T100 , T122

Singh, Rahul 15-3

Singh, Seema 13, 13-1, 13-4, 13-7, M42

Singh, Vijay M76

Sinitsyn, Arkady M113

Siqueira, Germano M82

Sitepu, Irnayuli T65

Sitepu, Irnayuli R . T46

Skovgaard-Petersen, Rune 9-4, T134

Slininger, P .J . T17

Sluiter, Amie 4-7, M45

Sluiter, Justin M45

Smidt, Mathew 11-2

Smith, Amanda T93

Smith, Holly T44

Smith, Tat 11

Smith, William A . 4-2, M29

Somani, Abhishek 7-5

Somerville, Grant 11-2

Sonon, Roberto M152

Sorensen, Thomas 8-5

Sousa, Diana T64

Sousa, L .D . T17

Sousa, Leonardo 13-4, M15, M126, M132 T82

Sousa Jr, Ruy M145

Page 65: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

65

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Sousek, Matthew M68

Souto, Betulia T45

Souza, Marcia da Silva M128

Souza e Silva, Mario Cesar M137

Sowell, Gage M72

Span, Elise A . 8-6

Spérandio, Mathieu 18-3, M16

Spooner, Jesse 17-1

Squina, Fabio M62, M150, M99

Sriariyanun, Malinee T105

Stahlberg, Jerry 8, 8-2, M67

Stams, Alfons T64

Staudhammer, Jacob T15

Steiger, Matthias 16-4

Stevens, Daniel 4-2, 11-6, M57, M68, M72

Stickel, Jonathan J . 12-2, 18-1, M108

Stødkilde-Jørgensen, Lene 11-3

Stoklosa, Ryan J . 5-1, T36

Straathof, Adrie J .J . T14, T33

Strap, Janice T97

Straus, Suzana 15-3

Suess, Daniel L .M . 8-6

Sun, Lan 15-7

Sun, Ning 13-1, 13-7, M42

Sunna, Anwar M80

Sunux, Sergio 8-7

Suzuki, Yo ST1, ST1-2, T81

Swidah, Reem 14-1

Swiderska, Anna 8-5

Sykes, Robert M59, M83

TTaatjes, Craig A, T23

Tachea, Firehiwot 15-4

Tada, Nobuki T94

Taherzadeh, Mohammad J . 18-5

Takeuchi, Ryo 16-5

Takors, Ralf 7-3

Talia, Paola M149

Tan, Zhongping M71

Taniguchi, Yohei T80

Tanjore, Deepti 11-4, 13-1, 13-7, M42

Tardioli, Paulo W . M148

Tashiro, Yohei T35

Taylor, Larry E . M32

Taylor, Steven 11-2

Taylor II, Larry E . 8-5, T59

Teh, Hui Ean T46

Teixeira, Gleidson S . T71

Tejirian, Ani ST1-3

Teleki, Attila 7-3

Templeton, David M45

Templeton, Paul M110

Tengstedt Hansen, Mads Anders 7-7

Teter, Sarah ST1-3

Textor, Larissa M98

Teymouri, Farzaneh 2-3, T63

Thelen, Michael P . T29, T122

Thibault, Etienne T68

Thirup, Laila 14-3, T138

Thomas, Steve 1

Thomas, Vanessa A . M30, M121

Thompson, David 11

Thompson, David N . 4-3, M61

Thompson, Jason 11-2

Thompson, Olivia A . 1-5

Thompson, S .R . T17

Thompson, Vicki 11-4, 11-6, 13-1, 13-7 M37, M42

Thomsen, Mette H . M31

Thygesen, Lisbeth G . 1-3, M58

Tian, Chaoguang T41

Tian, Liang T110, T125

Tiedje, Tonya 2-3

Timlin, Jerilyn A . M66

Tizapantzi, Gabriel Sanchez T131

Tobin, Matt 7

Todd, Carly ST1-3

Toivari, Mervi 16-3

Tolan, Jeffrey S . ST2-1

Tomás-Pejó, Elia 10-2, T4

Tominaga, Emiko T94

Topakas, Evangelos M117

Torres, Andres 1-1

Tozzi, Emilio J . 18-2

Tran, William T23

Trawick, John D . ST2-5

Trejo-Estrada, S .R . T75, T92

Trindade, Luisa M . 1-1, 1-7

Tringe, Susannah G . 8-4

Trinh, Cong T . T72

Trower, Whitney T122

Truong Nguyen, Phuong Vi M19

Trupia, Sabrina 5-5

Tschaplinski, Timothy M50, T87

Tu, Maobing T30

Tucker, Melvin P . 2-6, 5-4, M25, M75, T58

Tupinamba, Daiva T45, T67, T141

Turi, Adam T39

Tuskan, Gerald 1-5, M50

Typas, Milton T130

uUbhayasekera, Wimal M67

Um, Byung Hwan T25

Unrean, Pornkamol 14-5, T7

Uppugundla, Nirmal M52

Uyarte, Omar M5

VVaaje-Kolstad, Gustav 8-1

Vajzovic Suko, Azra T96

Valan Arasu, Mariadhas T119

Valerio, Vito 2-4, M1

Valles Ramirez, Silvia Marisol T11

Page 66: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

66

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

van den Berg, Marco 7

VanderGheynst, Jean 16-6, M119 T86, T100, T120 , T122

van der Pol, Edwin M39

Vander Wall, Todd T59

van der Weijde, Tim 1-7

van der Wielen, Luuk A .M . 12-6, M94, M146, T33

van Dyk, J . Susan 14-4

Van Dyk, Susan M20

van Rijsewijk, Bart Haverkorn T79

van Zeeland, Alniek M39

van Zyl, J . M . (Sewis) 6-2

van Zyl, John-Henry DV 6-2

van Zyl, W . H . (Emile) 6-2

Vardon, Derek R . 2-5

Várnai, Anikó 10-6

Vaz, Lorena T42

Vaz de Arruda, Priscila T40

Vaz Rossell, Carlos Eduardo M63, T121, T132

Velazquez, Jesús T135

Venditti, Richard 9-2

Venkatachalam, Sivasankari 10-1

Verardi Abdelnur, Patrícia T133

Verbeke, Tobin J . T87, T88

Vicente, Fernando T89

Videto, Josh J . T63

Vieille, Claire T126, T127

Villela, Tainah M40

Villone, Antonio 2-4

Viola, Egidio M1

Volkov, Pavel M113

von Bergen, Martin 16-2

Vrgoc, Filip M14, M70

Vu, Ahn 12-1, 13-5

Vu, Van V . 8-6

WWagschal, Kurt M110

Walker, Johnnie 10-1

Wallberg, Ola 17-3, M8, M14, M70, M133 T47, T49

Wang, Da Mao M154

Wang, Hongliang 2-6, T58

Wang, Hui 14-1

Wang, Jing-Yuan 5-3

Wang, Letian T43

Wang, Mingyu M48

Wang, Qinhong T41

Wang, Ruifei 14-5, T7

Wang, Wei 5-4, 14-2, T5, T59, T69

Ward, Richard John 15-5

Ware, Anne M83

Wargacki, Adam T93

Watanabe, Marcos M100

Watanabe, Marcos Djun Barbosa 17-7

Weeks, Jonathan T70

Wei, Hui 1-4, 14-2, M75, T5, T59, T69

Wei, Maogui 13-3

Wei, Na T99

Wei, Yu-Hong T108

Weiss, Noah D . 1-3

Wellington, Muchero 1-5, M50

Wendt, Lynn M . 4-2, M29, M72

West, Thomas P . T61, T139

Westereng, Bjørge 8-1

Westh, Peter 10-4

Westman, Johan 14-5, T7

Westover, Tyler 4-3, M61, T6

Westpheling, Janet 3, 3-7, T88

Wickramasinghe, Ranil 12-1, 13-5, 18-1

Widner, William ST1-3

Wiebe, Marilyn G . 16-3

Williams, Dan M28

Wilson, Charlotte M . T91

Wischral, Daiana T18, T66

Wisuthiphaet, Nicharee T103

Wolf, Lucia M99

Wolfe, Ken 6-1

Wolf Maciel, Maria Regina M78, M140

Wolfrum, Edward 4-7, 11-5, M45

Wortzman, Barry ST2-2

Wu, Chenyi 8-5

Wu, Jhan-Hong M53

Wu, Ruimei 16-7

Wu, Weihua T23, T77

Wu, Yu-Wei 8-4

Wu, Zheng-Ze T90

Wyman, Charles E . 12-5, 13-2, M6, M26, M30 M43, M118, M121,M135, M139

Wynn, James 2-3, T63

xXiao, Weihua T28

Xie, Dan M51

Ximenes, Eduardo M10, M34, M112, M124 M125, M151

Xing, Xuerong T41

Xiong, Shaojun 13-3

Xu, Feng 13-1, 13-7, M42

Xu, Hui 10-5, M3

Xu, Qi T113

Xue, Saisi 6-4, M52, T82

Xue, Xiaoyun 3-4

Xue, Y . T17

yYamakawa, Celina Kiyomi M63, M127 T121, T132

Yan, Lishi 5-7

Yang, Bin 5, 2-6, 3-4, 5-7, T58

Yang, Haitao M50

Yang, Jae-Kyung M38, M130

Yang, Jungwoo M69

Page 67: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

67

Author Index

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Yang, Shihui 16, T5, T113

Yang, Xiaoguang M95, T56, T101

Yang, Ying T74

Yao, Guangshan 16-7

Yarbrough, John M32

Yasutani, Noriko T94

Ye, Zhixia 3-5

Ye, Zhuoliang M79

Yee, Kelsey 1-5, ST2-5

Yeh, Li-Hsien M53

Yeh, LI-Hsien M9

Yin, Hang M32

Yoo, Chang Geun 2-2

Yoo, Hah Young M95, T56, T101

Yoo, Jin Cheol M95

Yoon, Jeong-Jun M36

Young, Jenna 3-7

Young, J Peter W M92

Youngsukkasem, Supansa 18-5

Yu, Byung Jo T25

Yu, Ju Hyun T54

Yun, Eun Ju T12, T124

Yun, Jihyun T117

zZanphorlin, Leticia Maria 15-1 M60, M90, M99, M150

Zanuso, Elisa T135

Zeng, Yining M75

Zhai, Rui M73

Zhang, Leyu M125

Zhang, Libing 5-7

Zhang, Min 14-2, T5, T59, T69

Zhang, Shuting 2-2

Zhang, Ximing T28

Zhang, Yaoping 6-6, M51

Zhang, Zhanying T111

Zhao, Shuai M75

Zhou, Jilai T110

Zhu, Daochen 3-4

Zhu, J .Y . 9-1

Zhu, Yunhua T8

Zimbardi, Francesco 2-4, M1

Zimmer, Jochen M105

Znameroski, Elizabeth ST1-3

Page 68: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

68

Notes

symposium oN BiotechNology for fuels aNd chemicals 2015

Page 69: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

69

Notes

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Page 70: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

70

Notes

symposium oN BiotechNology for fuels aNd chemicals 2015

Page 71: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

71

Notes

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Page 72: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

72

Notes

symposium oN BiotechNology for fuels aNd chemicals 2015

Page 73: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

73

Notes

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Page 74: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

74

Notes

symposium oN BiotechNology for fuels aNd chemicals 2015

Page 75: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

75

Notes

SympoSium on Biotechnology for fuelS and chemicalS 2015

Page 76: Table of ConTenTsInternational Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo . past awardees of the raphael katzen award 2008 30th Symposium Raphael Katzen 2009 31st Symposium Douglas Cameron 2010

76

Notes

symposium oN BiotechNology for fuels aNd chemicals 2015