Background: Chitosan oligosaccharides (COS) have great potential for applications in several fields, including agriculture, food industry or medicine. Nevertheless, the large-scale use of COS requires the development of cost-effective technologies for their production. The main objective of our investigation was to develop an effective method of enzymatic degradation of chitosan in a column reactor using Mucor circinelloides IBT-83 cells, immobilized in a polyurethane foam (PUF). These cells serve as a source of chitosanolytic enzymes.
Results: The study revealed that the process of freeze-drying of immobilized mycelium increases the stability of the associated enzymes during chitosan hydrolysis. The use of stabilized preparations as an active reactor bed enables the production of COS at a constant level for 16 reactor cycles (384 h in total), i.e. 216 h longer compared to non-stabilized mycelium. In the hydrolysate, oligomers ranging in structure from dimer to hexamer as well as D-glucosamine were detected. The potential application of the obtained product in agriculture has been verified. The results of phytotests have demonstrated that the introduction of COS into the soil at a concentration of 0.01 or 0.05% w/w resulted in an increase in the growth of Lepidium sativum stem and root, respectively (extensions by 38 and 44% compared to the control sample).
Conclusions: The research has verified that the PUF-immobilized M. circinelloides IBT-83 mycelium, which has been stabilized through freeze-drying, is a promising biocatalyst for the environmentally friendly and efficient generation of COS. This biocatalyst has the potential to be used in fertilizers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12934-024-02529-4 | DOI Listing |
Microb Cell Fact
September 2024
Institute of Molecular and Industrial Biotechnology, Faculty of Biotechnology and Food Sciences, Lodz University of Technology, 2/22 Stefanowskiego Str., Lodz, 90-537, Poland.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol
August 2021
School of Environment and Energy, Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School, Shenzhen, China.
Chitin is one of the most abundant biopolymers. Due to its recalcitrant nature and insolubility in accessible solvents, it is often considered waste and not a bioresource. The products of chitin modification such as chitosan and chitooligosaccharides are highly sought, but their preparation is a challenging process, typically performed with thermochemical methods that lack specificities and generate hazardous waste.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioresour Technol
October 2018
Institute of Technical Biochemistry, Lodz University of Technology, 90-924 Lodz, Stefanowskiego 4/10, Poland.
The goal of this study was to increase the cost-effectiveness of oil production by an oleaginous and lipolytic strain M. circinelloides IBT-83, by optimizing both lipids accumulation in the mycelium containing intracellular lipases, and a one-step process coupling lipids extraction and enzymatic trans/esterification. In optimal conditions (culture medium composed of corn steep solids, plant oil, glucose and NO) over 50g/dm of biomass containing over 60% of lipids was produced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrep Biochem Biotechnol
October 2017
a Faculty of Biotechnology and Food Sciences, Institute of Technical Biochemistry , Lodz University of Technology, Lodz , Poland.
Mucor circinelloides IBT-83 mycelium that exhibits both lipolytic (A) and chitosanolytic (A) activities was immobilized into polyurethane foam in a 30 L laboratory fermenter. The process of immobilization was investigated in terms of the carrier porosity, its type, amount, and shape, location inside the fermenter, mixing, and aeration parameters during the culture, as well as downstream processing operations. The selected conditions allowed for immobilization of approximately 7 g of defatted and dried mycelium in 1 g of carrier, i.
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