4.7 Article

Extraction of the Bacterial Extracellular Polysaccharide FucoPol by Membrane-Based Methods: Efficiency and Impact on Biopolymer Properties

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14030390

Keywords

exopolysaccharide; fucopol; extraction; diafiltration; ultrafiltration; emulsion; rheology

Funding

  1. FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, I.P. of the Research Unit on Applied Molecular Biosciences-UCIBIO [UIDP/04378/2020, UIDB/04378/2020]
  2. FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, I.P. of the Associate Laboratory Institute for Health and Bioeconomy-i4HB [LA/P/0140/2020]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, membrane-based methods were evaluated for the recovery of fucose-rich exopolysaccharide (EPS) secreted by Enterobacter A47. The optimized method showed a reduction in water consumption and extraction time, and an increase in product recovery and purity. The changes also improved the emulsion-forming capacity and rheological properties of the biopolymer, which are important for its application in cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and food products.
In this study, membrane-based methods were evaluated for the recovery of FucoPol, the fucose-rich exopolysaccharide (EPS) secreted by the bacterium Enterobacter A47, aiming at reducing the total water consumption and extraction time, while keeping a high product recovery, thus making the downstream procedure more sustainable and cost-effective. The optimized method involved ultrafiltration of the cell-free supernatant using a 30 kDa molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) membrane that allowed for a 37% reduction of the total water consumption and a 55% reduction of the extraction time, compared to the previously used method (diafiltration-ultrafiltration with a 100 kDa MWCO membrane). This change in the downstream procedure improved the product's recovery (around 10% increase) and its purity, evidenced by the lower protein (8.2 wt%) and inorganic salts (4.0 wt%) contents of the samples (compared to 9.3 and 8.6 wt%, respectively, for the previously used method), without impacting FucoPol's sugar and acyl groups composition, molecular mass distribution or thermal degradation profile. The biopolymer's emulsion-forming and stabilizing capacity was also not affected (emulsification activity (EA) with olive oil, at a 2:3 ratio, of 98 +/- 0% for all samples), while the rheological properties were improved (the zero-shear viscosity increased from 8.89 +/- 0.62 Pa center dot s to 17.40 +/- 0.04 Pa center dot s), which can be assigned to the higher purity degree of the extracted samples. These findings demonstrate a significant improvement in the downstream procedure raising FucoPol's recovery, while reducing water consumption and operation time, key criteria in terms of process economic and environmental sustainability. Moreover, those changes improved the biopolymer's rheological properties, known to significantly impact FucoPol's utilization in cosmetic, pharmaceutical or food products.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available