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1.
Summary The fermentation by Candida shehatae and Pichia stipitis of xylitol and the various sugars which are liberated upon hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass was investigated. Both yeasts produced ethanol from d-glucose, d-mannose, d-galactose and d-xylose. Only P. stipitis fermented d-cellobiose, producing 6.5 g·l-1 ethanol from 20 g·l-1 cellobiose within 48 h. No ethanol was produced from l-arabinose, l-rhamnose or xylitol. Diauxie was evident during the fermentation of a sugar mixture. Following the depletion of glucose, P. stipitis fermented galactose, mannose, xylose and cellobiose simultaneously with no noticeable preceding lag period. A similar fermentation pattern was observed with C. shehatae, except that it failed to utilize cellobiose even though it grew on cellobiose when supplied as the sole sugar. P. stipitis produced considerably more ethanol from the sugar mixture than C. shehatae, primarily due to its ability to ferment cellobiose. In general P. stipitis exhibited a higher volumetric rate and yield of ethanol production. This yeast fermented glucose 30–50% more rapidly than xylose, whereas the rates of ethanol production from these two sugars by C. shehatae were similar. P. stipitis had no absolute vitamin requirement for xylose fermentation, but biotin and thiamine enhanced the rate and yield of ethanol production significantly.Nomenclature max Maximum specific growth rate, h-1 - Q p Maximum volumetric rate of ethanol production, calculated from the slope of the ethanol vs. time curve, g·(l·h)-1 - q p Maximum specific rate of ethanol production, g·(g cells·h) - Y p/s Ethanol yield coefficient, g ethanol·(g substrate utilized)-1 - Y x/s Cell yield coefficient, g biomass·(g substrate utilized)-1 - E Efficiency of substrate utilization, g substrate consumed·(g initial substrate)-1·100  相似文献   

2.
Candida shehatae cells, cultivated on d-glucose and d-xylose, were subjected to a shift from fully aerobic to anaerobic fermentative conditions. After anaerobic conditions were imposed, growth was limited to approximately one doubling or less as C. shehatae rapidly entered a stationary phase of growth. Following the shift to anoxia, cell viability rapidly declined and the total cell volume declined in the d-xylose fermentations. Moreover, the cell volume distribution shifted to smaller volumes. Cell viability, measured by plate counts, declined nine times faster for d-xylose fermentations than for d-glucose fermentations. Anaerobic growth did not occur on either d-glucose or d-xylose. Selected vitamins and amino acids did not stimulate anaerobic growth in C. shehatae, but did enhance anaerobic growth on d-glucose in S. cerevisiae. The decline in cell viability and lack of anaerobic growth by C. shehatae were attributed to oxygen deficiency and not to ethanol inhibition. The results shed light on why C. shehatae anaerobic fermentations are not currently practical and suggest that research directed towards a biochemical understanding of why C. shehatae can not grow anaerobically will yield significant improvements in ethanol fermentations from d-xylose. Received 26 October 1998 / Received revision: 26 January 1999 / Accepted: 12 February 1999  相似文献   

3.
The fermentation of d-glucose and d-xylose mixtures by the yeast Candida tropicalis NBRC 0618 has been studied under the most favourable operation conditions for the culture, determining the most adequate initial proportion in these sugars for xylitol production. In all the experiments a synthetic culture medium was used, with an initial total substrate concentration of 25 g L−1, a constant pH of 5.0 and a temperature of 30 °C. From the experimental results, it was deduced that the highest values of specific rates of production and of overall yield in xylitol were achieved for the mixtures with the highest percentage of d-xylose, specifically in the culture with the initial d-glucose and d-xylose concentrations of 1 and 24 g L−1, respectively, with an overall xylitol yield of 0.28 g g−1. In addition, the specific rates of xylitol production declined over the time course of the culture and the formation of this bioproduct was favoured by the presence of small quantities of d-glucose. The sum of the overall yield values in xylitol and ethanol for all the experiments ranged from 0.26 to 0.56 g bioproduct/g total substrate.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Fed-batch cultivations of Pichia stipitis and strains of Candida shehatae with d-xylose or d-glucose were conducted at controlled low dissolved oxygen tension (DOT) levels. There were some marked differences between the strains. In general growth was inhibited at lower ethanol concentrations than fermentation, and ethanol levels of up to 47 g·l-1 were produced at 30°C. Ethanol production was mainly growth associated. The yeast strains formed small amounts of monocarboxylic acids and higher alcohols, which apparently did not enhance the ethanol toxicity. The maximum ethanol concentration obtained on d-xylose could not be increased by using a high cell density culture, nor by using d-glucose as substrate. The latter observation suggested that the low ethanol tolerance of these xylose-fermenting yeast strains was not a consequence of the metabolic pathway used during pentose fermentation. In contrast with the C. shehatae strains, it was apparent with P. stipitis CSIR-Y633 that when the ethanol concentration reached about 28 g·l-1, ethanol assimilation exceeded ethanol production, despite cultivation at a low DOT of 0.2% of air saturation. Discontinuing the aeration enabled ethanol accumulation to proceed, but with concomitant xylitol production and cessation of growth.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The direct conversion of d-xylose to ethanol was investigated using immobilized growing and non-growing cells of the yeast Pachysolen tannophilus. Both preparations produced ethanol from d-xylose, however the d-xylose conversion to ethanol was much better with immobilized growing cells. Ethanol concentration up to 22.9 g/l and ethanol yield of 0.351 g/g of d-xylose were obtained in batch fermentation by immobilized growing cells whereas only 17.0 g/l and 0.308 g/g of d-xylose were obtained by immobilized non-growing cells. With continuous systems, immobilized growing cells were necessary for the long-term operation, since a steady state ethanol concentration of 17.7 g/l was maintained for only one week by immobilized non-growing cell reactor. With simultaneous control of aeration rate and concentrations of nitrogen sources in feed medium, immobilized growing cells of P. tannophilus showed excellent performance. At a residence time of 25 h, the immobilized cell reactor produced 26.9 g/l of ethanol from 65 g/l of d-xylose in feed medium.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of biomass formation, D-xylose utilization, and mixed substrate utilization were determined in a chemostat using the yeast Candida shehatae. The maximum growth rate of C. shehatae grown aerobically on D-xylose was 0.42 h−1 and the Monod constant, K s, was 0.06 g L−1. The biomass yield, Y {X/S}, ranged from 0.40 to 0.50 g g−1 over a dilution rate range of 0.2–0.3 h−1, when C. shehatae was grown on pure D-xylose. Mixtures of D-xylose and glucose (∼1 : 1) were simultaneously utilized over a dilution rate from 0.15 to 0.35 h−1 at pH 3.5 and 4.5, but pH 3.5 reduced μmax and reduced the dilution rate range over which D-xylose was utilized in the presence of glucose. At pH 4.5, μmax was not reduced with the mixed sugar feed and the overall or lumped K s value was not significantly increased (0.058 g L−1 vs 0.06 g L−1), when compared to a pure D-xylose feed. Kinetic data indicate that C. shehatae is an excellent candidate for chemostat production of value added products from renewable carbon sources, since simultaneous mixed substrate utilization was observed over a wide range of growth rates on a 1 : 1 mixture of glucose and D-xylose. Received 21 August 1997/ Accepted in revised form 28 May 1998  相似文献   

7.
Candida shehatae cells pre-grown on D-xylose simultaneously consumed mixtures of D-xylose and D-glucose, under both non-growing (anoxic) and actively growing conditions (aerobic), to produce ethanol. The rate of D-glucose consumption was independent of the D-xylose concentration for cells induced on D-xylose. However, the D-xylose consumption rate was approximately three times lower than the D-glucose consumption rate at a 50% D-glucose: 50% D-xylose mixture. Repression was not observed (substrate utilization rates were approximately equal) when the percentage of D-glucose and D-xylose was changed to 22% and 78%, respectively. In fermentations with actively growing cells (50% glucose and D-xylose), ethanol yields from D-xylose increased, the % D-xylose utilized increased, and the xylitol yield was significantly reduced in the presence of D-glucose, compared to anoxic fermentations (YETOH,xylose = 0.2–0.40 g g−1, 75–100%, and Yxylitol = 0–0.2 g g−1 compared to YETOH,xylose = 0.15 g g−1, 56%, Yxylitol = 0.51 g g−1, respectively). To increase ethanol levels and reduce process time, fed-batch fermentations were performed in a single stage reactor employing two phases: (1) rapid aerobic growth on D-xylose (μ = 0.32 h−1) to high cell densities; (2) D-glucose addition and anaerobic conditions to produce ethanol (YETOH,xylose = 0.23 g g−1). The process generated high cell densities, 2 × 109 cells ml−1, and produced 45–50 g L−1 ethanol within 50 h from a mixture of D-glucose and D-xylose (compared to 30 g L−1 in 80 h in the best batch process). The two-phase process minimized loss of cell viability, increased D-xylose utilization, reduced process time, and increased final ethanol levels compared to the batch process. Received 23 February 1998/ Accepted in revised form 15 July 1998  相似文献   

8.
Summary The ability of C. guilliermondii and C. parapsilosis to ferment xylose to xylitol was evaluated under different oxygen transfer rates in order to enhance the xylitol yield. In C. guilliermondii, a maximal xylitol yield of 0.66 g/g was obtained when oxygen transfer rate was 2.2 mmol/l.h. Optimal conditions to produce xylitol by C. parapsilosis (0.75 g/g) arose from cultures at pH 4.75 with 0.4 mmoles of oxygen/l.h. The response of the yeasts to anaerobic conditions has shown that oxygen was required for xylose metabolism.Nomenclature max maximum specific growth rate (per hour) - qSmax maximum specific rate of xylose consumption (g xylose per g dry biomass per hour) - qpmax maximum specific productivity of xylitol (g xylitol per g dry biomass per hour) - Qp average volumetric productivity of xylitol (g xylitol per liter per hour) - YP/S xylitol yield (g xylitol per g substrate utilized) - YP'/S glycerol yield (g glycerol per g substrate utilized) - YX/S biomass yield (g dry biomass per g substrate utilized)  相似文献   

9.
l-Arabinose utilization by the yeasts Candida arabinofermentans PYCC 5603T and Pichia guilliermondii PYCC 3012 was investigated in aerobic batch cultures and compared, under similar conditions, to d-glucose and d-xylose metabolism. At high aeration levels, only biomass was formed from all the three sugars. When oxygen became limited, ethanol was produced from d-glucose, demonstrating a fermentative pathway in these yeasts. However, pentoses were essentially respired and, under oxygen limitation, the respective polyols accumulated—arabitol from l-arabinose and xylitol from d-xylose. Different l-arabinose concentrations and oxygen conditions were tested to better understand l-arabinose metabolism. P. guilliermondii PYCC 3012 excreted considerably more arabitol from l-arabinose (and also xylitol from d-xylose) than C. arabinofermentans PYCC 5603T. In contrast to the latter, P. guilliermondii PYCC 3012 did not produce any traces of ethanol in complex l-arabinose (80 g/l) medium under oxygen-limited conditions. Neither sustained growth nor active metabolism was observed under anaerobiosis. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the oxygen dependence of metabolite and product formation in l-arabinose-assimilating yeasts.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The induction of aldose reductase and polyol dehydrogenase activities by d-xylose, l-arabinose, d-galactose and d-glucose was studied in the yeast-like organism Aureobasidium pullulans CCY 27-1-26. d-xylose and l-arabinose induced two distinct NADPH-dependent aldose reductases and the inducing saccharide was simultaneously the most efficient substrate for the corresponding enzymatic reaction. Polyol dehydrogenase induced by d-xylose, l-arabinose and d-galactose was strictly NAD+-dependent and required only xylitol as a substrate of the enzymatic reaction. l-Arabitol did not act as a substrate for l-arabinose-induced polyol dehydrogenase either in the presence of NAD+ or NADP+.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The ability of a Candida shehatae and a Pachysolen tannophilus strain to ferment D-xylose to ethanol was evaluated in defined and complex media under different levels of aeration. Aeration enhanced the ethanol productivity of both yeasts considerably. C. shehatae maintained a higher fermentation rate and ethanol yield than P. tannophilus over a wide range of aeration levels. Ethanol production by C. shehatae commenced during the early stage of the fermentation, whereas with P. tannophilus there was a considerable lag between the initiation of growth and ethanol production. Both yeasts produced appreciable quantities of xylitol late in the fermentation. P. tannophilus failed to grow under anoxic conditions, producing a maximum of only 0.5 g · l-1 ethanol. In comparison, C. shehatae exhibited limited growth in anoxic cultures, and produced ethanol much more rapidly. Under the condition of aeration where C. shehatae exhibited the highest ethanol productivity, the fermentation parameters were: maximum specific growth rate, 0.15 h-1; maximum volumetric and specific rates of ethanol production, 0.7 g (l · h)-1 and 0.34 g ethanol (g cells · h)-1 respectively; ethanol yield, 0.36 g (g xylose)-1. The best values obtained with P. tannophilus were: maximum specific growth rate, 0.14 h-1; maximum volumetric and specific rates of ethanol production, 0.22 g (l · h)-1 and 0.07 h-1 respectively; ethanol yield coefficient, 0.28. Because of its higher ethanol productivity at various levels of aeration, C. shehatae has a greater potential for ethanol production from xylose than P. tannophilus.  相似文献   

12.
The ability to assimilate D-glucose and D-xylose was studied in 21 yeast species of the following genera: Candida, Kluyveromyces, Pachysolen, Pichia, and Torulopsis. All the cultures fermented D-glucose with the formation of ethanol. During the assimilation of D-xylose, ethanol was produced by P. stipitis and C. shehatae, whereas xylitol was produced by C. didensiae, C. intermediae, C. parapsilosis, C. silvanorum, C. tropicalis, K. fragilis, K. marxianus, P. guillermondii, and T. molishiama. The yeast P. tannophilus produced comparable amounts of both alcohols. The possible use of xylose-assimilating yeasts for the production of xy-litol and ethanol is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Summary A non-woven fabric was successfully applied for immobilization of Candida tropicalis to produce xylitol from d-xylose. Xylitol productivity was enhanced by feeding of d-glucose (50 g/l·d); 87 g xylitol/L was produced after 64 h cultivation. Non-woven fabric could be used five times for fed-batch cultivation.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The effect of substrate concentration (S 0) on the fermentation parameters of a sugar mixture byPichia stipitis Y 7124 was investigated under anaerobic and microaerobic conditions. Under microaerobiosisP. stipitis maintained high ethanol yield and productivity when initial substrate concentration did not exceed 150 g/l; ethanol yield of about 0.40 g/g and volumetric productivity up to 0.39 g/l per hour were obtained. Optimal specific ethanol productivity (0.2 g/g per hour) was observed withS 0=110 g/l. Under anaerobic conditionsP. stipitis exhibited the highest fermentative performances atS 0=20 g/l; it produced ethanol with a yield of 0.42 g/g, with a specific rate of 1.1 g/g per day. When the initial substrate level increased, specific ethanol productivity declined gradually and ethanol yield was dependent on the degree of utilization of each sugar in the mixture.Abbreviations E m maximum produced ethanol (g/l) - E 0 initial ethanol (g/l) - E v evaporated ethanol (g/l) - Q p volumetric productivity of ethanol (g ethanol/l per hour or g/l per day) - q p specific productivity of ethanol (g ethanol/g cells per hour) - q pm maximum specific productivity of ethanol (g/l per hour) - S 0 initial substrate concentration (g/l) - t f time at which produced ethanol is maximum (h) - Y p/s ethanol yield (g ethanol produced/g substrate utilized) - Y x/s cell yeild (g cells produced/g substrate utilized) - Y xo/xy xylitol yield (g xylitol produced/g xylose utilized) - probability coefficient - specific growth rate coefficient (h-1 or d-1)  相似文献   

15.
The relationship between the degree of aerobiosis, xylitol production and the initial two key enzymes of d-xylose metabolism were investigated in the yeasts Pichia stipitis, Candida shehatae and C. tenuis. Anoxic conditions severely curtailed growth and retarded ethanol productivity. This, together with the inverse relationship between xylitol accumulation and aeration level, suggested a degree of redox imbalance. The ratios of NADH- to NADPH-linked xylose reductase were similar in all three yeasts and essentially independent of the degree of aerobiosis, and thus did not correlate with their differing capacities for ethanol production, xylitol accumulation or growth under the different conditions of aerobiosis. Under anoxic conditions the enzyme activity of Pichia stipitis decreased significantly, which possibly contributed to its weaker anoxic fermentation of xylose compared to C. shehatae.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The ability to convertd-xylose to xylitol was screened in 44 yeasts from five genera. All but two of the strains produced some xylitol with varying rates and yields. The best xylitol producers were localized largely in the speciesCandida guilliermondii andC. tropicalis. Factors affecting xylitol production by a selectedC. guilliermondii strain, FTI-20037, were investigated. The results showed that xylitol yield by this strain was affected by the nitrogen source. Yield was highest at 30–35°C, and could be increased with decreasing aeration rate. Using high cell density and a defined medium under aerobic conditions, xylitol yield byC. guilliermondii FTI-20037 from 104 g/ld-xylose was found to be 77.2 g/l. This represented a yield of 81% of the theoretical value, which was computed to be 0.9 mol xylitol per mold-xylose.Issued as NRCC publication No. 28798.  相似文献   

17.
We have studied the ethanolic fermentation of D-xylose with Pachysolen tannophilus in batch cultures. We propose a model to predict variations in D-xylose consumed, and biomass and ethanol produced, in which we include parameters for the specific growth rate, for the consumption of D-xylose and production of ethanol either related or not to growth.The ideal initial pH for ethanol production turned out to be 4.5. At this pH value the net specific growth rate was 0.26 h–1, biomass yield was 0.16 g.g–1, the cell-maintenance coefficient was 0.073 g.g–1.h–1, the parameter for ethanol production non-related to growth was 0.064 g.g–1,h–1 and the maximum ethanol yield was 0.32 g.g–1.List of Symbols A c Carbon atomic weight - a d1/h Specific cell-maintenance rate defined in Eq. (8) - c Mass fraction of carbon in the biomass - E g/l Ethanol concentration - f x Correction factor defined in Eq. (13) - f x Correction factor defined in Eq. (13) - f xi Correction factor defined in Eq. (14) - k d1/h Death constant - M E Ethanol molecular weight - M s Xylose molecular weight - M xi Xylitol molecular weight - m g xylose/g biomass Maintenance coefficient for substrate - m dg xylose/g biomass Maintenance coefficient when k d - q Eg ethanol/g biomass. Specific ethanol production rate - s g/l Residual xylose concentration - s 0 g/l Initial xylose concentration - t h Time - x g/l Biomass concentration - x 0 g/l Initial biomass concentration - Y E/sg ethanol/g xylose Instantaneous ethanol yield - ¯Y E/sg ethanol/g xylose Mean ethanol yield - Y E s/T g ethanol/g xylose Theoretical ethanol yield - Y E s/* g ethanol/g xylose Corrected instantaneous ethanol yield - ¯Y E s/* g ethanol/g xylose Corrected mean ethanol yield - Y x/sg biomass/g xylose Biomass yield - ¯Y xi/sg xylitol/g xylose Mean xylitol yield Greek Letters g ethanol/g biomass Growth-associated product formation parameter - g ethanol/g biomass.h Non-growth-associated product formation parameter - dg ethanol/g biomass.h Non-growth-associated product formation parameter when k d0 - h Variable defined in Eq. (6) or Eq. (7) - 1/h Specific growth rate - m1/h Maximum specific growth rate  相似文献   

18.
Summary The fermentation ofd-xylose byPachysolen tannophilus, Candida shehatae, andPichia stipitis has been investigated by13C-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of both whole cells and extracts. The spectra of whole cells metabolizingd-xylose with natural isotopic abundance had significant resonance signals corresponding only to xylitol, ethanol and xylose. The spectra of whole cells in the presence of [1-13C]xylose or [2-13C]xylose had resonance signals corresponding to the C-1 or C-2, respectively, of xylose, the C-1 or C-2, respectively, of xylitol, and the C-2 or C-1, respectively, of ethanol. Xylitol was metabolized only in the presence of an electron acceptor (acetone) and the only identifiable product was ethanol. The fact that the amount of ethanol was insufficient to account for the xylitol metabolized indicates that an additional fate of xylitol carbon must exist, probably carbon dioxide. The rapid metabolism of xylulose to ethanol, xylitol and arabinitol indicates that xylulose is a true intermediate and that xylitol dehydrogenase catalyzes the reduction (or oxidation) with different stereochemical specificity from that which interconverts xylitol andd-xylulose. The amino acidl-alanine was identified by the resonance position of the C-3 carbon and by enzymatic analysis of incubation mixtures containing yeast and [1-13C]xylose or [1-13C]glucose. The position of the label from both substrates and the identification of isotope also in C-1 of alamine indicates flux through the transketolase/transaldolase pathway in the metabolism. The identification of a resonance signal corresponding to the C-1 of ethanol in spectra of yeast in the presence of [1-13C]xylose and fluoroacetate (but not arsenite) indicates the existence of equilibration of some precursor of ethanol (e.g. pyruvate) with a symmetric intermediate (e.g. fumarate or succinate) under these conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The ability ofCandida guillermondii to produce xylitol from xylose and to ferment individual non xylose hemicellulosic derived sugars was investigated in microaerobic conditions. Xylose was converted into xylitol with a yield of 0,63 g/g and ethanol was produced in negligible amounts. The strain did not convert glucose, mannose and galactose into their corresponding polyols but only into ethanol and cell mass. By contrast, fermentation of arabinose lead to the formation of arabitol. On D-xylose medium,Candida guillermondii exhibited high yield and rate of xylitol production when the initial sugar concentration exceeded 110 g/l. A final xylitol concentration of 221 g/l was obtained from 300 g/l D-xylose with a yield of 82,6% of theoretical and an average specific rate of 0,19 g/g.h.Nomenclature Qp average volumetric productivity of xylitol (g xylitol/l per hour) - qp average specific productivity of xylitol (g xylitol/g of cells per hour) - So initial xylose concentration (g/l) - tf incubation time (hours) - YP/S xylitol yield (g of xylitol produced/g of xylose utilized) - YE/S ethanol yield (g of ethanol produced/g of substrate utilized) - YX/S cells yield (g of cells/g of substrate utilized) - specific growth rate coefficient (h–1) - max maximum specific growth rate coefficient (h–1)  相似文献   

20.
Ko BS  Rhee CH  Kim JH 《Biotechnology letters》2006,28(15):1159-1162
The effects of glycerol and the oxygen transfer rate on the xylitol production rate by a xylitol dehydrogenase gene (XYL2)-disrupted mutant of Candida tropicalis were investigated. The mutant produced xylitol near the almost yield of 100% from d-xylose using glycerol as a co-substrate for cell growth and NADPH regeneration: 50 g d-xylose l−1 was completely converted into xylitol when at least 20 g glycerol l−1 was used as a co-substrate. The xylitol production rate increased with the O2 transfer rate until saturation and it was not necessary to control the dissolved O2 tension precisely. Under the optimum conditions, the volumetric productivity and xylitol yield were 3.2 g l−1 h−1 and 97% (w/w), respectively.  相似文献   

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