Applied Sciences (Oct 2024)

Acidulated Soapstock as a Carbon Source for the Production of Mannosylerythritol Lipids by <i>Pseudozyma antarctica</i> ATCC 2706

  • Sushil S. Dombe,
  • Suraj N. Mali,
  • Jagruti V. Jadhav,
  • Sandeep B. Kale,
  • Amit P. Pratap,
  • Jorddy N. Cruz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app14219891
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 21
p. 9891

Abstract

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Acid oil produced from the acidulation of soapstock was investigated as a feedstock for producing a glycolipid biosurfactant, manosylerithritol lipid (MEL), by microbial fermentation. Fermentation with the optimized acid oil substrate concentration of 200 g L−1 resulted in 3.89 g L−1 of MEL. To enhance productivity, the titer MEL was produced by a multistage fermentation process with the periodic addition of 20–50 g L−1 substrate after the stationary phase of the culture. The repeated substrate feeding marginally enhanced the MEL titer up to 5.56 g L−1. The MEL from the culture broth was recovered by solvent extraction at different pH levels. Among the solvents tested, ethyl acetate: acetonitrile (9:1) demonstrated a higher partition coefficient value of 3.1 in acidic conditions with 75.6% MEL recovery. The MEL produced by using acid oil as feedstock has significant surface-active properties, measuring 2.8 × 10−6 M in critical micelle concentration with 29.3 mN m−1 surface tension.

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