Abstract

A Gram-positive bacterium, N52, that produces intracellular glucan from l-arabinose, was isolated from soil and identified as Sporosarcina sp. according to rRNA gene sequence analysis and physiological/biochemical characterizations. Glucan production by N52 increased significantly in the exponential phase of aerobic liquid culture and was maintained at the highest level during the stationary phase, reaching 37.0% of the cell dry weight. The glucan was also produced from other tested sugars originating from plant cell walls and was composed exclusively of alpha-1,4- and alpha-1,6-glucosidic linkages. When distillery waste was treated with N52 for 72 h, the total organic carbon (TOC), chemical oxygen demand and biochemical oxygen demand were reduced by 42.6%, 45.9% and 82.5%, respectively. Bacterial cells accumulated 31.9% of glucan per cell dry weight, fixing 16.0% of the TOC in the soluble fraction. Thus, this strain could provide us with a new process for waste management, including the bioconversion of organic materials to the valuable byproduct, alpha-glucan.

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