4.1 Article

ETHANOL PRODUCTION FROM Dekkera bruxellensis IN SYNTHETIC MEDIA WITH PENTOSE

Journal

BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 35, Issue 1, Pages 11-17

Publisher

BRAZILIAN SOC CHEMICAL ENG
DOI: 10.1590/0104-6632.20180351s20160475

Keywords

Dekkera bruxellensis; xylose; arabinose; ethanol

Funding

  1. INCT-Bioetanol FAPESP [2008/5798-6]
  2. CNPq [574002/2008-1]
  3. INCT-Bioetanol FAPESP from CAPES [2008/5798-6]
  4. CNPq from CAPES [574002/2008-1]

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Ethanol is obtained in Brazil from the fermentation of sugarcane, molasses or a mixture of these. Alternatively, it can also be obtained from products composed of cellulose and hemicellulose, called second generation ethanol-2G. The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, commonly applied in industrial ethanol production, is not efficient in the conversion of pentoses, which is present in high amounts in lignocellulosic materials. This study aimed to evaluate the ability of a yeast strain of Dekkera bruxellensis in producing ethanol from synthetic media, containing xylose or arabinose, xylose and glucose as the sole carbon sources. The results indicated that D. bruxellensis was capable of producing ethanol from xylose and arabinose, with ethanol concentration similar for both carbon sources, 1.9 g L-1. For the fermentations performed with xylose and glucose, there was an increase in the concentration of ethanol to 5.9 g L-1, lower than the standard yeast Pichia stipitis (9.3 g L-1), but with similar maximum yield in ethanol (0.9 g g TOC-1). This proves that the yeast D. bruxellensis produced lower amounts of ethanol when compared with P. stipitis, but showed that is capable of fermenting xylose and can be a promising alternative for ethanol conversion from hydrolysates containing glucose and xylose as carbon source.

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