RRC ID 75251
Author Joulak I, Concórdio-Reis P, Torres CAV, Sevrin C, Grandfils C, Attia H, Freitas F, Reis MAM, Azabou S.
Title Sustainable use of agro-industrial wastes as potential feedstocks for exopolysaccharide production by selected Halomonas strains.
Journal Environ Sci Pollut Res Int
Abstract Large quantities of waste biomass are generated annually worldwide by many industries and are vastly underutilized. However, these wastes contain sugars and other dissolved organic matter and therefore can be exploited to produce microbial biopolymers. In this study, four selected Halomonas strains, namely, Halomonas caseinilytica K1, Halomonas elongata K4, Halomonas smyrnensis S3, and Halomonas halophila S4, were investigated for the production of exopolysaccharides (EPS) using low-cost agro-industrial wastes as the sole carbon source: cheese whey, grape pomace, and glycerol. Interestingly, both yield and monosaccharide composition of EPS were affected by the carbon source. Glucose, mannose, galactose, and rhamnose were the predominant monomers, but their relative molar ratio was different. Similarly, the average molecular weight of the synthesized EPS was affected, ranging from 54.5 to 4480 kDa. The highest EPS concentration (446 mg/L) was obtained for H. caseinilytica K1 grown on cheese whey that produced an EPS composed mostly of galactose, rhamnose, glucose, and mannose, with lower contents of galacturonic acid, ribose, and arabinose and with a molecular weight of 54.5 kDa. Henceforth, the ability of Halomonas strains to use cost-effective substrates, especially cheese whey, is a promising approach for the production of EPS with distinct physicochemical properties suitable for various applications.
Volume 29(15)
Pages 22043-22055
Published 2022-3-1
DOI 10.1007/s11356-021-17207-w
PII 10.1007/s11356-021-17207-w
PMID 34773587
MeSH Halomonas* Industrial Waste Molecular Weight Monosaccharides Polysaccharides, Bacterial / chemistry
Resource
General Microbes JCM 32859 JCM 32862 JCM 32865 JCM 32866