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Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing

Glycolipid biosurfactants are the most prominent group of microbial biosurfactants, comprising rhamnolipids, sophorolipids and mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs). Usually, large amounts of hydrophobic substrates (e.g., vegetable oils) are used to achieve high titers (~200 g/L) of a crude product of lo...

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Autores principales: Nascimento, Miguel Figueiredo, Keković, Petar, Ribeiro, Isabel A. C., Faria, Nuno Torres, Ferreira, Frederico Castelo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9860925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36676888
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13010081
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author Nascimento, Miguel Figueiredo
Keković, Petar
Ribeiro, Isabel A. C.
Faria, Nuno Torres
Ferreira, Frederico Castelo
author_facet Nascimento, Miguel Figueiredo
Keković, Petar
Ribeiro, Isabel A. C.
Faria, Nuno Torres
Ferreira, Frederico Castelo
author_sort Nascimento, Miguel Figueiredo
collection PubMed
description Glycolipid biosurfactants are the most prominent group of microbial biosurfactants, comprising rhamnolipids, sophorolipids and mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs). Usually, large amounts of hydrophobic substrates (e.g., vegetable oils) are used to achieve high titers (~200 g/L) of a crude product of low purity at values limited to 50–60%, contaminated with unconsumed triacylglycerol and residual free fatty acids and monoacylglycerides. The methods reported for the removal of these contaminants use a mixture of organic solvents, compromising solvent recyclability and increasing final process costs. This study reports, for the first time, an innovative downstream method for MELs, in which 90% of the triacylglycerols are separated from the crude MEL mixture in a first stage and the other lipid derivatives (free fatty acids, mono- and diacylglycerols) are removed by organic solvent nanofiltration (OSN). Three commercially available membranes (GMT-oNF-2, PuraMEm-600 and DuramMem-500) and several homemade membranes, casted from 22, 24 or 26% (w/v) polybenzimidazole (PBI) solutions, were assessed for crude MELs purification by diafiltration. A final purity of 87–90% in the MELs was obtained by filtering two diavolumes of methanol or ethyl acetate solutions through a PBI 26% membrane, resulting in MELs losses of 14.7 ± 6.1% and 15.3 ± 2.2%, respectively. Higher biosurfactant purities can be archived using the PBI 26% membrane at higher DV, but at the cost of higher product losses. Namely, in MeOH, the use of 6 DV leads to losses of 32% for MELs and 18% for sophorolipids. To obtain MELs at reagent grade with purities equal or higher than 97%, a two-sequential cascade filtration approach was implemented using the commercial membrane, GMT-oNF. In such a process, MELs with 98% purity was obtained at the cost of 11.6% MELs losses. Finally, decoloration, important in some applications, was successfully assessed using activated carbon. Overall, this study reports a unique solution for microbial biosurfactants production with minimal product losses, enabling solvent recycling and potentially reducing costs.
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spelling pubmed-98609252023-01-22 Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing Nascimento, Miguel Figueiredo Keković, Petar Ribeiro, Isabel A. C. Faria, Nuno Torres Ferreira, Frederico Castelo Membranes (Basel) Article Glycolipid biosurfactants are the most prominent group of microbial biosurfactants, comprising rhamnolipids, sophorolipids and mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs). Usually, large amounts of hydrophobic substrates (e.g., vegetable oils) are used to achieve high titers (~200 g/L) of a crude product of low purity at values limited to 50–60%, contaminated with unconsumed triacylglycerol and residual free fatty acids and monoacylglycerides. The methods reported for the removal of these contaminants use a mixture of organic solvents, compromising solvent recyclability and increasing final process costs. This study reports, for the first time, an innovative downstream method for MELs, in which 90% of the triacylglycerols are separated from the crude MEL mixture in a first stage and the other lipid derivatives (free fatty acids, mono- and diacylglycerols) are removed by organic solvent nanofiltration (OSN). Three commercially available membranes (GMT-oNF-2, PuraMEm-600 and DuramMem-500) and several homemade membranes, casted from 22, 24 or 26% (w/v) polybenzimidazole (PBI) solutions, were assessed for crude MELs purification by diafiltration. A final purity of 87–90% in the MELs was obtained by filtering two diavolumes of methanol or ethyl acetate solutions through a PBI 26% membrane, resulting in MELs losses of 14.7 ± 6.1% and 15.3 ± 2.2%, respectively. Higher biosurfactant purities can be archived using the PBI 26% membrane at higher DV, but at the cost of higher product losses. Namely, in MeOH, the use of 6 DV leads to losses of 32% for MELs and 18% for sophorolipids. To obtain MELs at reagent grade with purities equal or higher than 97%, a two-sequential cascade filtration approach was implemented using the commercial membrane, GMT-oNF. In such a process, MELs with 98% purity was obtained at the cost of 11.6% MELs losses. Finally, decoloration, important in some applications, was successfully assessed using activated carbon. Overall, this study reports a unique solution for microbial biosurfactants production with minimal product losses, enabling solvent recycling and potentially reducing costs. MDPI 2023-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9860925/ /pubmed/36676888 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13010081 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Nascimento, Miguel Figueiredo
Keković, Petar
Ribeiro, Isabel A. C.
Faria, Nuno Torres
Ferreira, Frederico Castelo
Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing
title Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing
title_full Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing
title_fullStr Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing
title_full_unstemmed Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing
title_short Novel Organic Solvent Nanofiltration Approaches for Microbial Biosurfactants Downstream Processing
title_sort novel organic solvent nanofiltration approaches for microbial biosurfactants downstream processing
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9860925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36676888
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13010081
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