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Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach

This study aims to utilize a noxious weed water hyacinth biomass (WH) for polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) production. Alkaline and peracetic acid pretreatment was employed for the hydrolysis of WH and consequently enzymatic saccharification to produce fermentable sugars for PHB production. The pretreatmen...

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Autores principales: Saratale, Rijuta Ganesh, Cho, Si-Kyung, Ghodake, Gajanan S., Shin, Han-Seung, Saratale, Ganesh Dattatraya, Park, Yooheon, Lee, Hee-Seok, Bharagava, Ram Naresh, Kim, Dong-Su
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32751380
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12081704
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author Saratale, Rijuta Ganesh
Cho, Si-Kyung
Ghodake, Gajanan S.
Shin, Han-Seung
Saratale, Ganesh Dattatraya
Park, Yooheon
Lee, Hee-Seok
Bharagava, Ram Naresh
Kim, Dong-Su
author_facet Saratale, Rijuta Ganesh
Cho, Si-Kyung
Ghodake, Gajanan S.
Shin, Han-Seung
Saratale, Ganesh Dattatraya
Park, Yooheon
Lee, Hee-Seok
Bharagava, Ram Naresh
Kim, Dong-Su
author_sort Saratale, Rijuta Ganesh
collection PubMed
description This study aims to utilize a noxious weed water hyacinth biomass (WH) for polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) production. Alkaline and peracetic acid pretreatment was employed for the hydrolysis of WH and consequently enzymatic saccharification to produce fermentable sugars for PHB production. The pretreatment competence was determined using various operational parameters. By applying ambient conditions, alkaline pretreatment gave higher lignin removal of 65.0%, with 80.8% hydrolysis yield, and on enzyme hydrolysis (40 FPU/g of dry WH), produced total reducing sugar of about 523 mg/g of WH. The resulted WH enzymatic hydolysates were evaluated for the production of PHB by Ralstonia eutropha (ATCC 17699). The WH hydrolysates cultivation was compared to synthetic hydrolysates that contain a similar carbon composition in terms of bacterial growth and PHB synthesis. The effects of various supplements to enhance PHB production were estimated. Supplementation of corn steep liquor (CSL) as a cheap nitrogen source with WH hydrolysates favored a higher amount of PHB synthesis (73%), PHB titer of 7.30 g/L and PHB yield of 0.429 g/g of reducing sugar. Finally, using standard analytical tools, the physical and thermal characteristics of the extracted PHB were evaluated. The findings revealed WH was a promising and technically feasible option for transforming biomass into sustainable biopolymer conversion on a large scale.
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spelling pubmed-74647822020-09-04 Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach Saratale, Rijuta Ganesh Cho, Si-Kyung Ghodake, Gajanan S. Shin, Han-Seung Saratale, Ganesh Dattatraya Park, Yooheon Lee, Hee-Seok Bharagava, Ram Naresh Kim, Dong-Su Polymers (Basel) Article This study aims to utilize a noxious weed water hyacinth biomass (WH) for polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) production. Alkaline and peracetic acid pretreatment was employed for the hydrolysis of WH and consequently enzymatic saccharification to produce fermentable sugars for PHB production. The pretreatment competence was determined using various operational parameters. By applying ambient conditions, alkaline pretreatment gave higher lignin removal of 65.0%, with 80.8% hydrolysis yield, and on enzyme hydrolysis (40 FPU/g of dry WH), produced total reducing sugar of about 523 mg/g of WH. The resulted WH enzymatic hydolysates were evaluated for the production of PHB by Ralstonia eutropha (ATCC 17699). The WH hydrolysates cultivation was compared to synthetic hydrolysates that contain a similar carbon composition in terms of bacterial growth and PHB synthesis. The effects of various supplements to enhance PHB production were estimated. Supplementation of corn steep liquor (CSL) as a cheap nitrogen source with WH hydrolysates favored a higher amount of PHB synthesis (73%), PHB titer of 7.30 g/L and PHB yield of 0.429 g/g of reducing sugar. Finally, using standard analytical tools, the physical and thermal characteristics of the extracted PHB were evaluated. The findings revealed WH was a promising and technically feasible option for transforming biomass into sustainable biopolymer conversion on a large scale. MDPI 2020-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7464782/ /pubmed/32751380 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12081704 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Saratale, Rijuta Ganesh
Cho, Si-Kyung
Ghodake, Gajanan S.
Shin, Han-Seung
Saratale, Ganesh Dattatraya
Park, Yooheon
Lee, Hee-Seok
Bharagava, Ram Naresh
Kim, Dong-Su
Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach
title Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach
title_full Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach
title_fullStr Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach
title_full_unstemmed Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach
title_short Utilization of Noxious Weed Water Hyacinth Biomass as a Potential Feedstock for Biopolymers Production: A Novel Approach
title_sort utilization of noxious weed water hyacinth biomass as a potential feedstock for biopolymers production: a novel approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32751380
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12081704
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