Loading…

Enhancement of extracellular lipid production by oleaginous yeast through preculture and sequencing batch culture strategy with acetic acid

•An acid-tolerant oleaginous yeast was found.•The yeast began to release extracellular lipids when acetic acid exceeded 20g/L.•Pre-culture of seed yeast using acetate increased the extracellular lipids to 37.7%.•Sequencing batch cultivation increased the extracellular lipids to 50.5%. Oleaginous yea...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Bioresource technology 2018-01, Vol.247, p.395-401
Main Authors: Huang, Xiang-feng, Shen, Yi, Luo, Hui-juan, Liu, Jia-nan, Liu, Jia
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•An acid-tolerant oleaginous yeast was found.•The yeast began to release extracellular lipids when acetic acid exceeded 20g/L.•Pre-culture of seed yeast using acetate increased the extracellular lipids to 37.7%.•Sequencing batch cultivation increased the extracellular lipids to 50.5%. Oleaginous yeast Cryptococcus curvatus MUCL 29819, an acid-tolerant lipid producer, was tested to spill lipids extracellularly using different concentrations of acetic acid as carbon source. Extracellular lipids were released when the yeast was cultured with acetic acid exceeding 20g/L. The highest production of lipid (5.01g/L) was obtained when the yeast was cultured with 40g/L acetic acid. When the yeast was cultivated with moderate concentration (20g/L) of acetic acid, lipid production was further increased by 49.6% through preculture with 40g/L acetic acid as stimulant. When applying high concentration (40g/L) of acetic acid as carbon source in sequencing batch cultivation, extracellular lipids accounted up to 50.5% in the last cycle and the extracellular lipids reached 5.43g/L through the whole process. This study provides an effective strategy to enhance extracellular lipid production and facilitate the recovery of microbial lipids.
ISSN:0960-8524
1873-2976
DOI:10.1016/j.biortech.2017.09.096