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Scaling up and scaling down the production of galactaric acid from pectin using Trichoderma reesei

Year of publication

2017

Authors

Paasikallio, Toni; Huuskonen, Anne; Wiebe, Marilyn

Abstract

<p>Background: Bioconversion of d-galacturonic acid to galactaric (mucic) acid has previously been carried out in small scale (50-1000 mL) cultures, which produce tens of grams of galactaric acid. To obtain larger amounts of biologically produced galactaric acid, the process needed to be scaled up using a readily available technical substrate. Food grade pectin was selected as a readily available source of d-galacturonic acid for conversion to galactaric acid. Results: We demonstrated that the process using Trichoderma reesei QM6a Δgar1 udh can be scaled up from 1 L to 10 and 250 L, replacing pure d-galacturonic acid with commercially available pectin. T. reesei produced 18 g L <sup>-1</sup> galactaric acid from food-grade pectin (yield 1.00 g [g d-galacturonate consumed] <sup>-1</sup>) when grown at 1 L scale, 21 g L <sup>-1</sup> galactaric acid (yield 1.11 g [g d-galacturonate consumed] <sup>-1</sup>) when grown at 10 L scale and 14 g L <sup>-1</sup> galactaric acid (yield 0.77 g [g d-galacturonate consumed] <sup>-1</sup>) when grown at 250 L scale. Initial production rates were similar to those observed in 500 mL cultures with pure d-galacturonate as substrate. Approximately 2.8 kg galactaric acid was precipitated from the 250 L culture, representing a recovery of 77% of the galactaric acid in the supernatant. In addition to scaling up, we also demonstrated that the process could be scaled down to 4 mL for screening of production strains in 24-well plate format. Production of galactaric acid from pectin was assessed for three strains expressing uronate dehydrogenase under alternative promoters and up to 11 g L <sup>-1</sup> galactaric acid were produced in the batch process. Conclusions: The process of producing galactaric acid by bioconversion with T. reesei was demonstrated to be equally efficient using pectin as it was with d-galacturonic acid. The 24-well plate batch process will be useful screening new constructs, but cannot replace process optimisation in bioreactors. Scaling up to 250 L demonstrated good reproducibility with the smaller scale but there was a loss in yield at 250 L which indicated that total biomass extraction and more efficient DSP would both be needed for a large scale process. </p>
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Organizations and authors

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd

Huuskonen Anne

Wiebe Marilyn

Paasikallio Toni

Publication type

Publication format

Article

Parent publication type

Journal

Article type

Original article

Audience

Scientific

Peer-reviewed

Peer-Reviewed

MINEDU's publication type classification code

A1 Journal article (refereed), original research

Publication channel information

Volume

16

Issue

1

Article number

119

​Publication forum

63322

​Publication forum level

1

Open access

Open access in the publisher’s service

Yes

Open access of publication channel

Fully open publication channel

License of the publisher’s version

CC BY

Self-archived

No

Article processing fee (EUR)

1745

Year of payment for the open publication fee

2017

Other information

Fields of science

Materials engineering; Environmental biotechnology; Industrial biotechnology; Medical biotechnology; Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology; Biomedicine

Keywords

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Language

English

International co-publication

No

Co-publication with a company

No

DOI

10.1186/s12934-017-0736-3

The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection

Yes