Abstract

BackgroundL-arabinose is an important intermediate for anti-virus drug synthesis and has also been used in food additives for diets-controlling in recent years. Commercial production of L-arabinose is a complex progress consisting of acid hydrolysis of gum arabic, followed by multiple procedures of purification, thus making high production cost. Therefore, there is a biotechnological and commercial interest in the development of new cost-effective and high-performance methods for obtaining high purity grade L-arabinose.ResultsAn alternative, economical method for purifying L-arabinose from xylose mother liquor was developed in this study. After screening 306 yeast strains, a strain of Pichia anomala Y161 was selected as it could effectively metabolize other sugars but not L-arabinose. Fermentation in a medium containing xylose mother liquor permitted enrichment of L-arabinose by a significant depletion of other sugars. Biochemical analysis of this yeast strain confirmed that its poor capacity for utilizing L-arabinose was due to low activities of the enzymes required for the metabolism of this sugar. Response surface methodology was employed for optimization the fermentation conditions in shake flask cultures. The optimum conditions were: 75 h fermentation time, at 32.5°C, in a medium containing 21% (v/v) xylose mother liquor. Under these conditions, the highest purity of L-arabinose reached was 86.1% of total sugar, facilitating recovery of white crystalline L-arabinose from the fermentation medium by simple methods.ConclusionYeast-mediated biopurification provides a dynamic method to prepare high purity of L-arabinose from the feedstock solution xylose mother liqour, with cost-effective and high-performance properties.

Highlights

  • L-arabinose is an important intermediate for anti-virus drug synthesis and has been used in food additives for diets-controlling in recent years

  • We identified Pichia anomala Y161 (China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center, accession no. 2480) that could grow well in a medium containing xylose, xylitol and galactose, but not L-arabinose, as a carbon source, and could grow well in a medium containing 10-30% (v/v) xylose mother liquor

  • Selection and identification of yeast Pichia anomala Y161 Among 306 strains of yeasts that were screened on YNB-based media supplemented with different sugars, all strains could utilize galactose as they were capable of growth on solid YNGL medium

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Summary

Introduction

L-arabinose is an important intermediate for anti-virus drug synthesis and has been used in food additives for diets-controlling in recent years. Commercial production of L-arabinose is a complex progress consisting of acid hydrolysis of gum arabic, followed by multiple procedures of purification, making high production cost. There is a biotechnological and commercial interest in the development of new costeffective and high-performance methods for obtaining high purity grade L-arabinose. The sugar, L-arabinose is named after gum arabic from which it was first isolated. It is a five-carbon sugar and is widely found in nature as a component of biopolymers such as hemicellulose and pectin. L-arabinose has been used in food additives and as an intermediate in drug synthesis [1,2].

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