Cellobiose lipids (CBLs) are a class of glycolipid biosurfactants produced by various fungal strains. These compounds have gained significant interest due to their surface-active and antifungal properties, which are comparable to traditional synthetic surfactants and antimicrobials. Despite their potential applicability in various cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and agricultural formulations, significantly less research has been focused on their production and purification in comparison to other glycolipid biosurfactants, such as mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs) and sophorolipids. Hence, this work proposes the development of a bioprocess that involves the microbial production and high-level chromatographic purification of CBLs from a submerged culture of Ustilago maydis DSM 4500. After a highly purified CBL product was obtained, the factors affecting the production of this glycolipid were investigated. It was demonstrated that U. maydis DSM 4500 produces a specific structural variant of CBLs at a concentration of 1.36 g/L on an optimized the growth medium. Also, it was established that when the C/N ratio was decreased, the CBL titer increased by 2.3-fold. Furthermore, supplementing the culture with ZnSO at a concentration of 0.04 mg/L further increased CBL concentration to 4.95 g/L, representing the highest CBL titer achieved in a single-stage bioprocess to date. This study developed a methodology for utilizing U. maydis as a high-level CBL producer, which could challenge other familiar CBL producers, such as Sporisorium scitamineum and Cryptococcus humicola.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00449-025-03127-3DOI Listing

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Cellobiose lipids (CBLs) are a class of glycolipid biosurfactants produced by various fungal strains. These compounds have gained significant interest due to their surface-active and antifungal properties, which are comparable to traditional synthetic surfactants and antimicrobials. Despite their potential applicability in various cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and agricultural formulations, significantly less research has been focused on their production and purification in comparison to other glycolipid biosurfactants, such as mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs) and sophorolipids.

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Glycolipids are a class of widely studied biosurfactants with excellent applicability in cosmetic and pharmaceutical formulations. This class of biosurfactants includes mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs), which have gained particular interest due to their moisturizing and healing activity for dry and damaged human skin, arising from conditions such as eczema. Traditionally, MELs have been produced by growing certain basidiomycetous yeasts on vegetable oils.

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Ustilipids, acylated beta-D-mannopyranosyl D-erythritols from Ustilago maydis and Geotrichum candidum.

J Antibiot (Tokyo)

February 2003

Aventis Pharma Industriepark Höchst, D-65926 Frankfurt/Main, Germany.

Ustilago species produce an extracellular oil that shows activity in various pharmaceutical assays. We isolated several complexes of this heterogeneous glycolipid from cultures of Ustilago maydis DSM 11494 and Geotrichum candidum ST 002515, and determined the chemical structures of these new compounds, termed ustilipids, on the basis of NMR experiments, mass spectra, and fatty acid analyses. They all possess a 4-O-beta-D-mannopyranosyl D-erythritol basic framework, the configuration of which was confirmed, after initial solvolysis, by a single-crystal X-ray structure analysis.

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