AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Fermentative caproate production from wastewater is attractive but is currently limited by the low product purity and concentration. In this work, continuous, selective production of caproate from acetate and ethanol, the common products of wastewater anaerobic fermentation, was achieved in an anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR). The reactor was continuously operated for over 522 days without need for chemical cleaning. With an ethanol-to-acetate ratio of 3.0, the effluent caproate concentration was 2.62 g/L on average and the caproate ratio in liquid products reached 74%. Further raising the influent ethanol content slightly increased the effluent caproate level but lowered the product selectivity and resulted in microbial inhibition. The Clostridia (the major caproate-producing bacteria) and Methanobacterium species (which consume hydrogen to alleviate microbial inhibition) was significantly enriched in the acclimated sludge. Our results imply a great potential of utilizing AnMBR to recover caproate from the effluent of wastewater acidogenic fermentation process.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2020.122865DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

selective production
8
production caproate
8
anaerobic membrane
8
membrane bioreactor
8
effluent caproate
8
microbial inhibition
8
caproate
7
long-term selective
4
caproate anaerobic
4
bioreactor fermentative
4

Similar Publications

Surface receptor-targeted Protein-based nanocarriers for drug delivery: Advances in cancer therapy.

Nanotechnology

January 2025

Department of Biotechnology, Kalasalingam Academy of Research and Education (Deemed to be University), Anand Nagar, School of Bio, Chemical & Process Enginneering, Krishnankoil, Krishnan Kovil, Tamil Nadu, 626126, INDIA.

Significant progress has been made in cancer therapy with protein-based nanocarriers targeted directly to surface receptors for drug delivery. The nanocarriers are a potentially effective solution for the potential drawbacks of traditional chemotherapy, such as lack of specificity, side effects, and development resistance. Peptides as nanocarriers have been designed based on their biocompatible, biodegradable, and versatile functions to deliver therapeutic agents into cancer cells, reduce systemic toxicity, and maximize therapy efficacy through utilizing targeted ligands such as antibodies, amino acids, vitamins, and other small molecules onto protein-based nanocarriers and thus ensuring that drugs selectively accumulate in the cancer cells instead of healthy organs/drug release at a target site without effects on normal cells, which inherently caused less systemic toxicity/off-target effect.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Telephone follow-up on Medicare patient surveys remains critical.

Am J Manag Care

January 2025

RAND, 1776 Main St, Santa Monica, CA 90401. Email:

Objectives: Patient experience surveys are essential to measuring patient-centered care, a key component of health care quality. Low response rates in underserved groups may limit their representation in overall measure performance and hamper efforts to assess health equity. Telephone follow-up improves response rates in many health care settings, yet little recent work has examined this for surveys of Medicare enrollees, including those with Medicare Advantage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Copy-number variants (CNVs) are an important class of genetic variation that can mediate rapid adaptive evolution. Whereas CNVs can increase the relative fitness of the organism, they can also incur a cost due to the associated increased gene expression and repetitive DNA. We previously evolved populations of Saccharomyces cerevisiae over hundreds of generations in glutamine-limited (Gln-) chemostats and observed the recurrent evolution of CNVs at the GAP1 locus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Eukaryotic genome size varies considerably, even among closely related species. The causes of this variation are unclear, but weak selection against supposedly costly "extra" genomic sequences has been central to the debate for over 50 years. The mutational hazard hypothesis, which focuses on the increased mutation rate to null alleles in superfluous sequences, is particularly influential, though challenging to test.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!