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Pigment Production Improvement in Rhodotorula mucilaginosa AJB01 Using Design of Experiments

Alejandra Garcia-Cortes, Julián Andres Garcia-Vásquez, Yani Aranguren, Maurício Ramírez-Castrillón

2021Microorganisms28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The discovery of biopigments has received considerable attention from the industrial sector, mainly for potential applications as novel molecules with biological activity, in cosmetics or if aquaculture food supplements. The main objective of this study was to increase the production of carotenoid pigments in a naturally pigmented yeast by subjecting the yeast to various cellular stresses using design of experiments. The fungal strain Rhodotorula mucilaginosa AJB01 was isolated from a food sample collected in Barranquilla, Colombia, and one of the pigments produced was β-carotene. This strain was subjected to various stress conditions, including osmotic stress using different salts, physical stress by ultraviolet (UV) light, and light stress using different photoperiods. The optimal growth conditions for carotenoid production were determined to be 1 min of UV light, 0.5 mg/L of magnesium sulfate, and an 18:6 h light/dark period, which resulted in a carotenoid yield of 118.3 µg of carotenoid per gram of yeast.

Topics & Concepts

CarotenoidPigmentFood scienceYeastRhodotorulaStrain (injury)Osmotic shockUltraviolet lightBiologyChemistryBotanyBiochemistryGenePhotochemistryAnatomyOrganic chemistryMicrobial Metabolism and ApplicationsAntioxidant Activity and Oxidative StressAlgal biology and biofuel production
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