Abstract

Petroleum-derived plastics dominate currently used plastic materials. These plastics are derived from finite fossil carbon sources and were not designed for recycling or biodegradation. With the ever-increasing quantities of plastic wastes entering landfills and polluting our environment, there is an urgent need for fundamental change. One component to that change is developing cost-effective plastics derived from readily renewable resources that offer chemical or biological recycling and can be designed to have properties that not only allow the replacement of current plastics but also offer new application opportunities. Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) remain a promising candidate for commodity bioplastic production, despite the many decades of efforts by academicians and industrial scientists that have not yet achieved that goal. This article focuses on defining obstacles and solutions to overcome cost-performance metrics that are not sufficiently competitive with current commodity thermoplastics. To that end, this review describes various process innovations that build on fed-batch and semi-continuous modes of operation as well as methods that lead to high cell density cultivations. Also, we discuss work to move from costly to lower cost substrates such as lignocellulose-derived hydrolysates, metabolic engineering of organisms that provide higher substrate conversion rates, the potential of halophiles to provide low-cost platforms in non-sterile environments for PHA formation, and work that uses mixed culture strategies to overcome obstacles of using waste substrates. We also describe historical problems and potential solutions to downstream processing for PHA isolation that, along with feedstock costs, have been an Achilles heel towards the realization of cost-efficient processes. Finally, future directions for efficient PHA production and relevant structural variations are discussed.

Highlights

  • Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are a class of biopolymers produced as intracellular energy/carbon storage materials that possess versatile material properties

  • We summarize high cell-density cultivations (HCDC) methods for the biosynthesis of scl- and medium-chain-length PHA (mcl-PHA) and associated strategies that lead to increased productivity

  • The mcl-PHAs usually occur as copolymers because the substrates used for biosynthesis are subjected to β-oxidation, resulting in the production of a mixture of repeat units that differ in chain length

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Summary

Introduction

Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are a class of biopolymers produced as intracellular energy/carbon storage materials that possess versatile material properties. In addition to production metrics, low cost downstream processing methodologies and PHA manufacturing that meets costperformance requirements have remained challenging. Continuous and fed-batch cultivations are crucial operation modes used to attain HCDC of bacteria for PHA production. While cell dry weight (CDW) above 50 g/L are considered as high for production of recombinant proteins [21,25], cell densities and residual biomass above 100 g/L and 30–40 g/L, respectively, are considered as HCDC for PHA production [15,26,27,28,29,30]. We summarize HCDC methods for the biosynthesis of scl- and mcl-PHA and associated strategies that lead to increased productivity. We will discuss approaches such as nutrient limitation, genetic and metabolic engineering, use of mixed culture and renewable carbon sources for enhancement of PHA production efficiency. 2. Modes of Operations for Production of Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) in High Cell Density Cultivations. Microbial cell growth occurs in R1, whereas PHA accumulation takes place in R2–R5

Batch Cultivations
Fed-Batch Fermentations
Continuous Culture
Effect of Nutrient Limitations on Yield of PHA
Enhancement of PHA Yield by β-Oxidation Inhibition
PHA Production Using Mixed Cultures
Lignocellulosic Feedstock
Waste Glycerol
Sugar-Cane Molasses as Carbon Source
Green Grass as Carbon Source
Starch as Carbon Source
Waste Vegetable Oils and Plant Oils as Carbon Sources
Wastewater for PHA Production
Global PHA Producer Companies at Pilot and Industrial Scale
Downstream Processing of PHA
Solvent Extraction
Halogenated Solvents
Non-Halogenated Solvents
Green Solvents
Ultrasound-Assisted Extraction
Supercritical Fluid Extraction
Aqueous Two-Phase Extraction
Enzymatic and Chemical Digestion Method
New Biological Recovery Methods
Findings
10. Conclusions

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