Autor: |
Valdez-Calderón, A., Barraza-Salas, M., Quezada-Cruz, M., Islas-Ponce, M. A., Angeles-Padilla, A. F., Carrillo-Ibarra, S., Rodríguez, M., Rojas-Avelizapa, N. G., Garrido-Hernández, A., Rivas-Castillo, A. M. |
Zdroj: |
Biomass Conversion and Biorefinery; November 2022, Vol. 12 Issue: 11 p4925-4938, 14p |
Abstrakt: |
Plastics are widely used for various applications. Once discarded, it is commonly known that they represent a high environmental threat due to their slow degradation; for this reason, there is an imminent need to replace these products with eco-friendlier ones. In the present work, four bacterial polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) producers, two consortia, and two isolated strains were successfully recovered from the facilities of a paper-manufacturing industry. Spectroscopic studies of the biopolymers obtained from these bacteria corroborated their PHB production capabilities, ranging from 4.04 ± 0.16 to 23.82 ± 3.39 g/L. The characterization of the isolate that presented the highest production yield initially coded as E22 led to the identification of a Klebsiella pneumoniaestrain, which, compared with other PHA bacterial producers reported to date, could be considered with high production potential. The strain E22 was grown in 5 different media prepared from fruit peel residues of banana, orange, papaya, watermelon, and melon, to determine its growth and PHA production capabilities in these low-cost media. The results obtained show different bacterial growth yields among the media tested, although PHB production yields and productivities were similar in all these low-cost media. Cellular accumulation of the biopolymer was higher in watermelon peel medium (8.4 × 10−10g/CFU). These results reveal the potential of K. pneumoniaeE22 for PHB production applications and establish encouraging alternatives to be broader explored regarding low-cost media that could enhance the scale-up of bacterial PHA production processes. |
Databáze: |
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