JOURNAL ARTICLE

Ethanol production from corn cob hydrolysates by Escherichia coli KO11

Kátia Gianni de Carvalho LimaC M TakahashiFlávio Alterthum

Year: 2002 Journal:   Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology Vol: 29 (3)Pages: 124-128   Publisher: Springer Science+Business Media

Abstract

Corn cob hydrolysates, with xylose as the dominant sugar, were fermented to ethanol by recombinant Escherichia coli KO11. When inoculum was grown on LB medium containing glucose, fermentation of the hydrolysate was completed in 163 h and ethanol yield was 0.50 g ethanol/g sugar. When inoculum was grown on xylose, ethanol yield dropped, but fermentation was faster (113 h). Hydrolysate containing 72.0 g/l xylose and supplemented with 20.0 g/l rice bran was readily fermented, producing 36.0 g/l ethanol within 70 h. Maximum ethanol concentrations were not higher for fermentations using higher cellular concentration inocula. A simulation of an industrial process integrating pentose fermentation by E. coli and hexose fermentation by yeast was carried out. At the first step, E. coli fermented the hydrolysate containing 85.0 g/l xylose, producing 40.0 g/l ethanol in 94 h. Baker's yeast and sucrose (150.0 g/l) were then added to the spent fermentation broth. After 8 h of yeast fermentation, the ethanol concentration reached 104.0 g/l. This two-stage fermentation can render the bioconversion of lignocellulose to ethanol more attractive due to increased final alcohol concentration.

Keywords:
Fermentation Xylose Hydrolysate Bioconversion Ethanol fuel Food science Yeast Ethanol Ethanol fermentation Chemistry Pentose Sugar Biochemistry Hydrolysis

Metrics

28
Cited By
1.63
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
18
Refs
0.82
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Biofuel production and bioconversion
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Microbial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Food composition and properties
Health Sciences →  Nursing →  Nutrition and Dietetics

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