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Bioconversion of sugarcane molasses waste to high-value exopolysaccharides by engineered Bacillus licheniformis

Muhammad Asgher, Aneeza Rani, Nimrah Khalid, Sarmad Ahmad Qamar, Muhammad Bilal

2021Case Studies in Chemical and Environmental Engineering33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Exopolysaccharides (EPS) are the large molecular weight carbohydrate polymers extracted from higher plants, algae, fungi and bacteria. EPS produced by bacteria differ from commercial EPS obtained from plants and algae as they have many unique characteristics. This study was designed to develop hyper EPS-producing Bacillus licheniformis mutant using different concentrations of ethyl(methanesulfonate) (EMS). The strain B. licheniformis exposed to 50 μg/mL for 120 min of time durations resulted the highest EPS production (2.855 g/L with 87.3% total carbohydrate content). Herein, to make the bioprocess economical, sugarcane molasses was used as a substrate in fermentation medium. Response surface methodology (RSM) was adapted for optimizational purpose and the mutual effect of various parameters influencing EPS yield was studied. At optimized culture conditions i.e., pH7, temperature 37.5 ​°C, inoculum size 2.5 mL, and 120 h of incubation period, the strain B. licheniformis M4 resulted maximum EPSs production of 9.006 g/L, which was significantly higher than the yield obtained before optimization of fermentation parameters. The improved EPS production by B. licheniformis mutant strain, make it a potential candidate for industrial and biotechnological applications.

Topics & Concepts

Bacillus licheniformisBioconversionFermentationFood scienceBioprocessStrain (injury)BacteriaYield (engineering)MyceliumBiotechnologyBiologyChemistryBotanyMaterials sciencePaleontologyMetallurgyAnatomyGeneticsBacillus subtilisBiofuel production and bioconversionEnzyme Production and CharacterizationMicrobial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology