Abstract

Water-oil interface of bacterial cell-stabilized Pickering emulsions is an exceptional habitat for microbial assimilation of both hydrophobic nutrients solubilized in oil phase and hydrophilic ones solubilized in water phase. Crystal substrate inhibition, i.e., decreasing phytosterol degradation with the increase loading of crystal phytosterols, is always observed during microbial transformation of phytosterols into steroid synthons in Mycolicibacterium sp (China Center of Industrial Culture Collection, CICC 21,097) cell-stabilized Pickering emulsions. In the present work, we confirmed that crystal substrate inhibition was attributed to the interaction between M. neoaurum and phytosterol crystals that led to the detachment of bacterial cells from the oil-water interfaces in bacterial cell-stabilized Pickering emulsions. Under the selected operation condition (25ml BEHP per 40ml water, 60g/L glucose, 25g/L phytosterols), the product androst-4-ene-3, 17-dione (AD) and androsta-1, 4-dien-3, 17-dione (ADD) concentration increased linearly with the progress of microbial transformation and reached almost 6g/L at the 11th day. This is a paradigm for microbial transformation of crystal substrates as well as in the presence of other surface active additives (such as chitosan and nonionic surfactants) in bacterial cell-stabilized Pickering emulsions. KEY POINTS: • Microbial transformation of crystal phytosterols in Pickering emulsions • Crystal substrate inhibition occurring during microbial transformation • Interaction between phytosterol crystals and bacterial cells leading to demulsification.

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