Abstract

SummaryGlycerol‐rich waste streams produced by the biodiesel, bioethanol and oleochemical industries can be treated and valorized by anaerobic microbial communities to produce methane. As current knowledge of the microorganisms involved in thermophilic glycerol conversion to methane is scarce, thermophilic glycerol‐degrading methanogenic communities were enriched. A co‐culture of Thermoanaerobacter and Methanothermobacter species was obtained, pointing to a non‐obligately syntrophic glycerol degradation. This hypothesis was further studied by incubating Thermoanaerobacter brockii subsp. finnii and T. wiegelii with glycerol (10 mM) in pure culture and with different hydrogenotrophic methanogens. The presence of the methanogen accelerated glycerol fermentation by the two Thermoanaerobacter strains up to 3.3 mM day−1, corresponding to 12 times higher volumetric glycerol depletion rates in the methanogenic co‐cultures than in the pure bacterial cultures. The catabolic pathways of glycerol conversion were identified by genome analysis of the two Thermoanaerobacter strains. NADH and reduced ferredoxin formed in the pathway are linked to proton reduction, which becomes thermodynamically favourable when the hydrogen partial pressure is kept low by the hydrogenotrophic methanogenic partner.

Highlights

  • Glycerol is coproduced in quantities that match approximately 10% of the total biodiesel production, leading to a surplus of this compound

  • Glycerol is generated in ethanol production by yeast (Navarrete et al, 2014) and is frequently present in different wastes/wastewater as e.g. from the oleochemical industry, where waste streams can contain up to 90% glycerol (Clomburg and Gonzalez, 2013)

  • Volatile fatty acids (VFA), lactate, glycerol and other alcohols were analysed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC; Jasco, Tokyo, Japan)

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Summary

Objectives

This work aims to gain insight into the different microbial key players involved in glycerol degradation in mixed thermophilic anaerobic cultures

Methods
Results
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