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1.
The ability of two yeast strains to utilize the lactose in whey permeate has been studied. Kluyveromyces marxianus NCYC 179 completely utilized the lactose (9.8%), whereas Saccharomyces cerevisiae NCYC 240 displayed an inability to metabolize whey lactose for ethanol production. Of the two gel matrices tested for immobilizing K. marxianus NCYC 179 cells, sodium alginate at 2% (w/v) concentration proved to be the optimum gel for entrapping the yeast cells effectively. The data on optimization of physiological conditions of fermentation (temperature, pH, ethanol concentration and substrate concentration) showed similar effects on immobilized and free cell suspensions of K. marxianus NCYC 179, in batch fermentation. A maximum yield of 42.6 g ethanol l?1 (82% of theoretical) was obtained from 98 g lactose l?1 when fermentation was carried at pH 5.5 and 30°C using 120 g dry weight l?1 cell load of yeast cells. These results suggest that whey lactose can be metabolized effectively for ethanol production using immobilized K. marxianus NCYC 179 cells.  相似文献   

2.
Recycle batch fermentations using immobilized cells of Propionibacterium acidipropionici were studied for propionate production from whey permeate, de-lactose whey permeate, and acid whey. Cells were immobilized in a spirally wound fibrous sheet packed in a 0.5-L column reactor, which was connected to a 5-L stirred tank batch fermentor with recirculation. The immobilized cells bioreactor served as a breeder for these recycle batch fermentations. High fermentation rates and conversions were obtained with these whey media without nutrient supplementation. It took approximately 55 h to ferment whey permeate containing approximately 45 g/L lactose to approximately 20 g/L propionic acid. Higher propionate concentrations can be produced with various concentrated whey media containing more lactose. The highest propionic acid concentration obtained with the recycle batch reactor was 65 g/L, which is much higher than the normal maximum concentration of 35 to 45 g/L reported in the literature. The volumetric productivity ranged from 0.22 g/L . h to 0.47 g/L . h, depending on the propionate concentration and whey medium used. The corresponding specific cell productivity was 0.033 to 0.07 g/L . g cell. The productivity increased to 0.68 g/L . h when whey permeate was supplemented with 1% (w/v) yeast extract. Compared with conventional batch fermentation, the recycle batch fermentation with the immobilized cell bioreactor allows faster fermentation, produces a higher concentration of product, and can be run continually without significant downtime. The process also produced similar fermentation results with nonsterile whey media. (c) 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
Continuous production of propionate from whey lactose by Propionibacterium acidipropionici immobilized in a novel fibrous bed bioreactor was studied. In conventional batch propionic acid fermentation, whey permeate without nutrient supplementation was unable to support cell growth and failed to give satisfactory fermentation results for over 7 days. However, with the fibrous bed bioreactor, a high fermentation rate and high conversion were obtained with plain whey permeate and de-lactose whey permeate. About 2% (wt/vol) propionic acid was obtained from a 4.2% lactose feed at a retention time of 35 to 45 h. The propionic acid yield was approximately 46% (wt/vol) from lactose. The optimal pH for fementation was 6.5, and lower fermentation rates and yields were obtained at lower pH values. The optimal temperature was 30 degrees C, but the temperature effect was not dramatic in the range of 25 to 35 degrees C. Addition of yeast extract and trypticase to whey permeate hastened reactor startup and increased the fermentation rate and product yields, but the addition was not required for long-term reactor performance. The improved fermentation results with the immobilized cell bioreactor can be attributed to the high cell density, approximately 50 g/L, attained in the bioreactor, Cells were immobilized by loose attachement to fiber surfaces and entrapment in the void spaces within the fibrous matrix, thus allowing constant renewal of cells. Consequently, this bioreactor was able to operate continuously for 6 months without encountering any clogging, degeneration, or contamination problems. Compared to conventional batch fermentors, the new bioreactor offers many advantages for industrial fermentation, including a more than 10-fold increase in productivity, acceptance of low-nutrient feedstocks such as whey permeate, and resistance to contamination. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Alcoholic fermentation of cheese whey permeate was investigated using a recombinant flocculating Saccharomyces cerevisiae, expressing the LAC4 (coding for beta-galactosidase) and LAC12 (coding for lactose permease) genes of Kluyveromyces marxianus enabling for lactose metabolization. Data on yeast fermentation and growth on cheese whey permeate from a Portuguese dairy industry is presented. For cheese whey permeate having a lactose concentration of 50 gL(-1), total lactose consumption was observed with a conversion yield of ethanol close to the expected theoretical value. Using a continuously operating 5.5-L bioreactor, ethanol productivity near 10 g L(-1) h(-1) (corresponding to 0.45 h(-1) dilution rate) was obtained, which raises new perspectives for the economic feasibility of whey alcoholic fermentation. The use of 2-times concentrated cheese whey permeate, corresponding to 100 gL(-1) of lactose concentration, was also considered allowing for obtaining a fermentation product with 5% (w/v) alcohol.  相似文献   

5.
Cheese whey fermentation to ethanol using immobilized Kluyveromyces marxianus cells was investigated in batch and continuous operation. In batch fermentation, the yeast cells were immobilized in carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) polymer and also synthesized graft copolymer of CMC with N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone, denoted as CMC-g-PVP, and the efficiency of the two developed cell entrapped beads for lactose fermentation to ethanol was examined. The yeast cells immobilized in CMC-g-PVP performed slightly better than CMC with ethanol production yields of 0.52 and 0.49 g ethanol/g lactose, respectively. The effect of supplementation of cheese whey with lactose (42, 70, 100 and 150 g/l) on fermentative performance of K. marxianus immobilized in CMC beads was considered and the results were used for kinetic studies. The first order reaction model was suitable to describe the kinetics of substrate utilization and modified Gompertz model was quite successful to predict the ethanol production. For continuous ethanol fermentation, a packed-bed immobilized cell reactor (ICR) was operated at several hydraulic retention times; HRTs of 11, 15 and 30 h. At the HRT of 30 h, the ethanol production yield using CMC beads was 0.49 g/g which implies that 91.07 % of the theoretical yield was achieved.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Growth of Propionibacterium acidi-propionici was studied on lactose as substrate and in acid whey permeate in a three-electrode poised-potential system with cobalt sepulchrate as artificial electron donor. In batch culture experiments in a stirred-tank reactor the substrate was fermented completely to propionic acid up to 6.5 g 1–1 lactose in a supplemented whey permeate medium. No acetic acid was produced during the growth of P. acidi-propionici. An electron flow of 80–100 mA was obtained and the electron balance was 101%. In continuously growing cultures with 3 g 1–1 of lactose as the substrate, propionate was formed as the only fermentation product up to a dilution rate (D) of 0.04 h–1. With D>0.04 h–1 the bacteria immobilized on the working electrode surface. It was examined whether an electron transfer occurred between the platinum working electrode and the immobilized cells. Correspondence to: W. Trösch  相似文献   

7.
Acetate was produced from whey lactose in batch and fed-batch fermentations using co-immobilized cells of Clostridium formicoaceticum and Lactococcus lactis. The cells were immobilized in a spirally wound fibrous sheet packed in a 0.45-L column reactor, with liquid circulated through a 5-L stirred-tank fermentor. Industrial-grade nitrogen sources, including corn steep liquor, casein hydrolysate, and yeast hydrolysate, were studied as inexpensive nutrient supplements to whey permeate and acid whey. Supplementation with either 2.5% (v/v) corn steep liquor or 1.5 g/L casein hydrolysate was adequate for the cocultured fermentation. The overall acetic acid yield from lactose was 0.9 g/g, and the productivity was 0.25 g/(L h). Both lactate and acetate at high concentrations inhibited the homoacetic fermentation. To overcome these inhibitions, fed-batch fermentations were used to keep lactate concentration low and to adapt cells to high-concentration acetate. The final acetate concentration obtained in the fed-batch fermentation was 75 g/L, which was the highest acetate concentration ever produced by C. formicoaceticum. Even at this high acetate concentration, the overall productivity was 0.18 g/(L h) based on the total medium volume and 1.23 g/(L h) based on the fibrous-bed reactor volume. The cells isolated from the fibrous-bed bioreactor at the end of this study were more tolerant to acetic acid than the original culture used to seed the bioreactor, indicating that adaptation and natural selection of acetate-tolerant strains occurred. This cocultured fermentation process could be used to produce a low-cost acetate deicer from whey permeate and acid whey.  相似文献   

8.
Propionate and acetate salts are environmentally friendly, effective road deicer substitutes for widely used sodium chloride. A low-cost medium, using raw cheese whey and hydrolyzed whey permeate/whey permeate powder as substrates, and corn-steep liquor as a nutrient supplement, was studied for lactic acid production, replacing synthetic lactose and other high-cost nutrients. A non-sterile stage-I fermentation process for improved lactate productivity using an inexpensive commercial medium was performed at a 20-L fermenter level. A lactate yield of 0.98 g/g lactose and a productivity of 1.1 g/L/h was obtained with complete lactose utilization. When synthetic lactate and glucose were used as substrates in propionate and acetate fermentation, a total acid yield of 0.55 g/g glucose and lactate consumed and a batch productivity of 0.22 g/L/h was obtained. A stage-II fermentation process to produce propionate and acetate salts from cheese whey-derived lactate (stage-I fermentation broth) resulted in 1.6%( w/v) propionate after a total of 161 h (stages I and II).  相似文献   

9.
A new low-cost β-galactosidase (lactase) preparation for whey permeate saccharification was developed and characterized. A biocatalyst with a lactase activity of 10 U/mg, a low transgalactosylase activity and a protein content of 0.22 mg protein/mg was obtained from a fermenter culture of the fungus Penicillium notatum. Factors influencing the enzymatic hydrolysis of lactose, such as reaction time, pH, temperature and enzyme and substrate concentration were standardized to maximize sugar yield from whey permeate. Thus, a 98.1% conversion of 5% lactose in whey permeate to sweet (glucose-galactose) syrup was reached in 48 h using 650 β-galactosidase units/g hydrolyzed substrate. After the immobilization of the acid β-galactosidase from Penicillium notatum on silanized porous glass modified by glutaraldehyde binding, more than 90% of the activity was retained. The marked shifts in the pH value (from 4.0 to 5.0) and optimum temperatures (from 50°C to 60°C) of the solid-phase enzyme were observed and discussed. The immobilized preparation showed high catalytic activity and stability at wider pH and temperature ranges than those of the free enzyme, and under the best operating conditions (lactose, 5%; β-galactosidase, 610–650 U/g lactose; pH 5.0; temperature 55°C), a high efficiency of lactose saccharification (84–88%) in whey permeate was achieved when lactolysis was performed both in a batch process and in a recycling packed-bed bioreactor. It seems that the promising results obtained during the assays performed on a laboratory scale make this immobilizate a new and very viable preparation of β-galactosidase for application in the processing of whey and whey permeates.  相似文献   

10.
This article examines the potential of lactose from whey permeate as a substrate for gibberellic acid production. In addition, the paper reports the derivation of mathematical models which simulate the various fermentation conditions to predict precise values. Of the five Fusarium moniliforme isolates screened for their ability to synthesize the gibberellic acid, F. moniliforme-1 proved to be the best strain (670 mg gibberellic acid/l) when fermentation was carried out at 28°C for 12 days. The product started to accumulate at the end of maximum growth phase (day 9) and continued until the curve reached a plateau (day 12). From the observed data and expected values, a temperature range of 27–30°C, pH range of 3.5–5.5 and an inoculum level of 10–12.5% (v/v) were considered optimal for attaining the highest product yield. However, nitrogen sources supplemented in whey permeate medium suppressed the ability of the culture under study to synthesize metabolite and utilize lactose.  相似文献   

11.
《Process Biochemistry》1999,34(5):501-509
Oligonucleotides (ON) extracted from yeasts are used as antiviral agents, immunostimulators, and flavour enhancers. Fed-batch fermentation of cheese whey by Kluyveromyces marxianus was carried out to produce high biomass yields to extract ON. K marxianus was grown for 20 h in medium containing 5% (w/v) dehydrated whey, at 30°C (pH 4.5), with agitation (350 rpm), and under aeration (1.0–2.0 vvm). After 20 h, media containing 10–15% (w/v) of dehydrated whey were added at different flow rates (180–230 ml/h). Samples were analyzed at 6–8 h intervals for cell count, lactose consumption, and ethanol production. Maximum production of biomass (28.13 g/l), yield (0.58 g/g), productivity (2.42 g/l per h), and specific growth rate (0.63 1/h) were obtained when medium containing 15% (w/v) of whey was added at 180 ml/h under 2 vvm aeration. Fed-batch fermentation converted 95% of whey lactose into biomass.  相似文献   

12.
Kluyveromyces fragilis immobilized in calcium alginate gel was compared to Saccharomyces cerevisiae coimmobilized with beta-galactosidase, for continuous ethanol production from whey permeate in packed-bed-type columns. Four different whey concentrations were studied, equivalent to 4.5, 10, 15, and 20% lactose, respectively. In all cases the coimmobilized preparation produced more ethanol than K. fragilis. The study went on for more than 5 weeks. K. fragilis showed a decline in activity after 20 days, while the coimmobilized preparation was stableduring the entrire investigation. Under experimental conditions theoretical yields of ethanol were obtained from 4.5 and 10% lactose substrates with the coimmobilized system. Using 15% lactose substrate, theoretical yields were only obtained when a galactose-adapted immobilized S. cerevisiae column was run in series with the coimmobilized column. Then a maximum of 71 g/L ethanol was produced with a productivity of 2.5 g/L h. The coimmobilized column alone gave a maximum ethanol concentration of 52 g/L with a productivity of 4.5 g/L h, whereas immobolized K. fragilis only produced 13 g/L ethanol with a productivity of 1.1 g/L h. It was not possible to obtain theoretical yields of ethanol from the highest substrate concentration.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The production of solvents from whey permeate in batch fermentation usingClostridium acetobutylicum P262 was examined. An overall reactor productivity of 0.24 g/l.h was observed, representing a marked improvement over reports using other strains of clostridia. Using a semi-synthetic medium galactose was shown to be as effective a substrate as glucose. When whey permeate was used in which the lactose was hydrolysed prior to fermentation, preferential uptake of glucose over galactose was observed, and such hydrolysis provided no advantage to the fermentation process.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Saccharomyces fragilis cells (40% w/v) were immobilized in 2% Ca-alginate and were used in a batch process for the removal of lactose from milk by fermentation. Immobilized cells (10 g) could completely desugarate 100 mL of milk in 3.5 h. The immobilized preparation was used repeatedly in 15 batches without decrease in the activity.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Living Kluyveromyces fragilis yeast cells were succesfully entrapped in calcium alginate gel beads at cell loadings of 4 to 16 g yeast (0.8 to 3.2 g d.m.) per 1 g of sodium alginate. In batch systems, about 90 % conversion in 48 h was obtained both with free and immobilized yeast using demineralized whey of 5 to 10 % lactose content as substrate. In continuous packed-bed column operation nearly a constant 2 % product ethanol concentration could be maintained at 5 % substrate lactose level for at least one month.  相似文献   

16.
The cheese whey, a by-product of dairy industry proved to be an attractive substrate for production of β-carotene. The β-carotene production from Mucor azygosporus MTCC 414 by using deproteinized waste whey filtrate under submerged fermentation was investigated. Various fermentation variables, such as lactose content in whey, initial pH, production temperature, incubation time, and carbon and nitrogen sources played significant role on β-carotene production. Maximum β-carotene production (385 μg/g dcw) was obtained with the whey (pH 5.5) containing 3.5% (w/v) lactose supplemented with soluble starch at (1.0%, w/v) at 30°C after a 5 days incubation. Moreover, unlike other microorganisms which utilize pre-hydrolyzed lactose, this Mucor azygosporus MTCC 414 was found to be capable of utilizing unhydrolyzed lactose present in the whey.  相似文献   

17.
The fermentation kinetics of methane production from whey permeate in a packed bed immobilized cell bioreactor at mesophilic temperatures and pHs around neutral was studied. Propionate and acetate were the only two major organic intermediates found in the methanogenic fermentation of lactose. Based on this finding, a three-step reaction mechanism was proposed: lactose was first degraded to propionate, acetate, CO(2), and H(2) by fermentative bacteria; propionate was then converted to acetate by propionate-degrading bacteria; and finally, CH(4) and CO(2) were produced from acetate, H(2), and CO(2) by methanogenic bacteria. The second reaction step was found to be the rate-limiting step in the overall methanogenic fermentation of lactose. Monod-type mathematical equations were used to model these three step reactions. The kinetic constants in the models were sequentially determined by fitting the mathematical equations with the experimental data on acetate, propionate, and lactose concentrations. A mixed-culture fermentation model was also developed. This model simulates the methanogenic fermentation of whey permeate very well.  相似文献   

18.
Lactic acid is a versatile organic acid, which finds major application in the food, pharmaceuticals, and chemical industries. Microbial fermentation has the advantage that by choosing a strain of lactic acid bacteria producing only one of the isomers, an optically pure product can be obtained. The production of l(+) lactic acid is of significant importance from nutritional viewpoint and finds greater use in food industry. In view of economic significance of immobilization technology over the free-cell system, immobilized preparation of Lactobacillus casei was employed in the present investigation to produce l(+) lactic acid from whey medium. The process conditions for the immobilization of this bacterium using calcium pectate gel were optimized, and the developed cell system was found stable during whey fermentation to lactic acid. A high lactose conversion (94.37%) to lactic acid (32.95 g/l) was achieved with the developed immobilized system. The long-term viability of the pectate-entrapped bacterial cells was tested by reusing the immobilized bacterial biomass, and the entrapped bacterial cells showed no decrease in lactose conversion to lactic acid up to 16 batches, which proved its high stability and potential for commercial application.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Acetic acid was produced from anaerobic fermentation of lactose by the co-culture ofStreptococcus lactis andClostridium formicoaceticum at 35° C and pHs between 7.0 and 7.6. Lactose was converted to lactic acid, and then to acetic acid in this mixed culture fermentation. The overall acetic acid yield from lactose was about 95% at pH 7.6 and 90% at pH 7.0. The fermentation rate was also higher at pH 7.6 than at pH 7.0. In batch fermentation of whey permeate containing about 5% lactose at pH 7.6, the concentration of acetic acid reached 20 g/l within 20 h. The production rate then became very slow due to end-product inhibition and high Na+ concentration. About 30 g/l acetate and 20 g/l lactate were obtained at a fermentation time of 80 h. However, when diluted whey permeate containing 2.5% lactose was used, all the whey lactose was converted to acetic acid within 30 h by this mixed culture.  相似文献   

20.
β-Galactosidase isolated from Aspergillus oryzae was immobilized in lens-shaped polyvinylalcohol capsules (with activity 25 U g−1) giving 32% of its original activity. Immobilization did not change the pH optimum (4.5) of lactose hydrolysis. The relative enzyme activity during product inhibition testing was, in average, 10% higher for immobilized enzyme. No decrease of activity was observed after 35 repeated batch runs and during 530 h of continuous hydrolysis of lactose (10%, w/v) at 45°C. The immobilized enzyme was stable for 14 months without any change of activity during the storage at 4°C and pH 4.5.  相似文献   

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