Publications by authors named "Agata Olszewska-Widdrat"

Article Synopsis
  • Concerns over environmental impacts of biowaste disposal are driving interest in lactic acid bacterial fermentation and optimizing digital bioreactors to mimic biochemical reactions.
  • Utilization of spectroscopic techniques (NIR and MIR) and High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) led to successful estimations of glucose and lactic acid contents during fermentation of glucose and biowaste substrates.
  • The study found high accuracy in predictive models for glucose substrates; however, the same models struggled with biowaste substrates, suggesting a potential area for improvement in fermentation process monitoring.
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The effective and cheap production of platform chemicals is a crucial step towards the transition to a bio-based economy. In this work, biotechnological methods using sustainable, cheap, and readily available raw materials bring bio-economy and industrial microbiology together: Microbial production of two platform chemicals is demonstrated [lactic (LA) and succinic acid (SA)] from a non-expensive side stream of pulp and paper industry (fibre sludge) proposing a sustainable way to valorize it towards economically important monomers for bioplastics formation. This work showed a promising new route for their microbial production which can pave the way for new market expectations within the circular economy principles.

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The utilisation of waste materials and industrial residues became a priority within the bioeconomy concept and the production of biobased chemicals. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility to continuously produce L-lactic acid from different renewable substrates, in a multi-substrate strategy mode. Based on batch experiments observations, A534 strain was able to continuously metabolise acid whey, sugar beet molasses, sugar bread, alfalfa press green juice and tapioca starch.

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Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) are a heterogeneous group of Gram-negative prokaryotes, which all produce special magnetic organelles called magnetosomes. The magnetosome consists of a magnetic nanoparticle, either magnetite (FeO) or greigite (FeS), embedded in a membrane, which renders the systems colloidaly stable, a desirable property for biotechnological applications. Although these bacteria are able to regulate the formation of magnetosomes through a biologically-controlled mechanism, the environment in general and the physico-chemical conditions surrounding the cells in particular also influence biomineralization.

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