4.7 Article

Enhanced 2,3-Butanediol production by mutant Enterobacter ludwigii using Brewers' spent grain hydrolysate: Process optimization for a pragmatic biorefinery loom

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 427, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2021.130851

Keywords

Enterobacter ludwigii; Random mutagenesis; Brewers' spent grain; Enzymatic hydrolysis; Glucose-rich BSG hydrolysate; 2,3-Butanediol

Funding

  1. Ineuvo Ltd

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This study is the first attempt to produce BDO from BSG. By optimizing the enzymatic hydrolysis conditions of BSG and employing uncontrolled pH strategy during fermentation, efficient production of BDO was achieved.
2,3-Butanediol (BDO) is a fossil-based versatile bulk chemical with a multitude of applications. BDO can also be synthesized using microbial cell factories harnessing renewable feedstocks. However, the high cost of the substrate via microbial route impedes commercial manufacturing of BDO. Therefore, identification of cheaper substrates could make bio-based BDO production more cost-competitive. Brewers' spent grain (BSG), a major byproduct of breweries, is an inexpensive source of fermentable sugars and proteins. In the present study, we have attempted the bioproduction of BDO by Enterobacter ludwigii using BSG as feedstock. A random E. ludwigii mutant obtained after treatment with ethyl methane sulfonate (EMS) resulted in a BDO titer (9.5 g/L), similar to 30% higher in comparison to the wild type strain with a yield of 0.48 g(BDO/gGlucose) approaching the theoretical yield of 0.50 g(BDO)/(gGlucose). The enzymatic hydrolysis of microwave-assisted alkali pretreated BSG was optimized using the statistical Taguchi design. The BSG hydrolysis under optimal conditions (pH: 6.0; temperature: 50 degrees C; BSG: 10% w/v; enzyme loading: 2% v/v) resulted in a glucose yield of 0.25 g(BDO/gGlucose) The uncontrolled pH was found to be more beneficial for BDO accumulation from BSG hydrolysate in batch bioreactor cultivation as compared with controlled one. The fed-batch cultivation with forced pH fluctuations at an aeration rate of 2.0 vvm resulted in BDO accumulation of 118.5 g/L from glucose-rich BSG hydrolysate with the yield and productivity of 0.43 g/g and 1.65 g/L.h, respectively. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study on BDO production from BSG.

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