Abstract

Vine shoots and surplus grape must were assessed as feedstocks for succinic acid production with Actinobacillus succinogenes and Basfia succiniproducens. After acidic and enzymatic hydrolysis, vine shoots released 35-40g/L total sugars. Both bacterial species produced 18-21g/L succinic acid from this hydrolysate in 120h. Regarding grape must fermentation, A. succinogenes clearly outperformed B. succiniproducens. Yeast extract (a source of organic nitrogen and vitamins) was the only additional nutrient needed by A. succinogenes to grow on grape must. Under mathematically optimized conditions (145.7g/L initial sugars and 24.9g/L yeast extract), A. succinogenes generated 88.9 ± 1.4g/L succinic acid in 96h, reaching a succinic acid yield of 0.66 ± 0.01g/g and a sugar consumption of 96.64 ± 0.30%. Substrate inhibition was not observed in grape musts with 125-150g/L initial sugars, provided that an adequate amount of yeast extract was available for bacteria. Alternative nitrogen sources to yeast extract (red wine lees, white wine lees, urea, NH4Cl, and choline chloride) were not suitable for A. succinogenes in grape must. KEY POINTS: • Vine shoots and surplus grape must were assessed for succinic acid bioproduction. • Succinic acid bioproduction was 21g/L with vine shoots and 89g/L with grape must. • Fermentation was efficient at high sugar loads if organic N supply was adequate.

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