4.7 Review

Valorisation of pectin-rich agro-industrial residues by yeasts: potential and challenges

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 15, Pages 6527-6547

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-020-10697-7

Keywords

Pectin-rich agro-industrial residues; Non-conventional yeasts; Bioconversion; Metabolic engineering; Biorefinery; Circular bioeconomy

Funding

  1. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [ERA-IB-2/0003/2015]
  2. Institute for Bioengineering and Biosciences (iBB) from FCT [UIDB/04565/2020, PD/BD/128035/2016]
  3. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [ERA-IB-2/0003/2015, PD/BD/128035/2016] Funding Source: FCT

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Pectin-rich agro-industrial residues are feedstocks with potential for sustainable biorefineries. They are generated in high amounts worldwide from the industrial processing of fruits and vegetables. The challenges posed to the industrial implementation of efficient bioprocesses are however manyfold and thoroughly discussed in this review paper, mainly at the biological level. The most important yeast cell factory platform for advanced biorefineries is currently Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but this yeast species cannot naturally catabolise the main sugars present in pectin-rich agro-industrial residues hydrolysates, in particular d-galacturonic acid and l-arabinose. However, there are non-Saccharomyces species (non-conventional yeasts) considered advantageous alternatives whenever they can express highly interesting metabolic pathways, natively assimilate a wider range of carbon sources or exhibit higher tolerance to relevant bioprocess-related stresses. For this reason, the interest in non-conventional yeasts for biomass-based biorefineries is gaining momentum. This review paper focuses on the valorisation of pectin-rich residues by exploring the potential of yeasts that exhibit vast metabolic versatility for the efficient use of the carbon substrates present in their hydrolysates and high robustness to cope with the multiple stresses encountered. The major challenges and the progresses made related with the isolation, selection, sugar catabolism, metabolic engineering and use of non-conventional yeasts and S. cerevisiae-derived strains for the bioconversion of pectin-rich residue hydrolysates are discussed. The reported examples of value-added products synthesised by different yeasts using pectin-rich residues are reviewed.

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