Abstract

Single cell oil (SCO) produced by oleaginous yeasts is considered as a sustainable source for biodiesel and oleochemicals since its production does not compete with food or feed and high yields can be obtained from a wide variety of carbon sources, e.g., acetate or lignocellulose. Downstream processing is still costly preventing the broader application of SCO. Direct transesterification of freeze-dried biomass is widely used for analytical purposes and for biodiesel production but it is energy intensive and, therefore, expensive. Additionally, only fatty acid esters are produced limiting the subsequent applications. The harsh conditions applied during direct esterification might also damage high-value polyunsaturated fatty acids. Unfortunately, universal downstream strategies effective for all yeast species do not exist and methods have to be developed for each yeast species due to differences in cell wall composition. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate three industrially relevant cell disruption methods combined with three extraction systems for the SCO extraction of two novel, unconventional oleaginous yeasts, Saitozyma podzolica DSM 27192 and Apiotrichum porosum DSM 27194, based on cell disruption efficiency, lipid yield, and oil quality. Bead milling (BM) and high pressure homogenization (HPH) were effective cell disruption methods in contrast to sonification. By combining HPH (95% cell disruption efficiency) with ethanol-hexane-extraction 46.9 ± 4.4% lipid/CDW of S. podzolica were obtained which was 2.7 times higher than with the least suitable combination (ultrasound + Folch). A. porosum was less affected by cell disruption attempts. Here, the highest disruption efficiency was 74% after BM and the most efficient lipid recovery method was direct acidic transesterification (27.2 ± 0.5% fatty acid methyl esters/CDW) after freeze drying. The study clearly indicates cell disruption is the decisive step for SCO extraction. At disruption efficiencies of >90%, lipids can be extracted at high yields, whereas at lower cell disruption efficiencies, considerable amounts of lipids will not be accessible for extraction regardless of the solvents used. Furthermore, it was shown that hexane-ethanol which is commonly used for extraction of algal lipids is also highly efficient for yeasts.

Highlights

  • Microbial triacylglycerols (SCO) which are produced by oleaginous bacteria, algae, yeast, and fungi are promising sustainable platform chemicals

  • We evaluate combinations of cell disruption and extraction methods on two by Schulze et al (2014) isolated oleaginous yeasts, Saitozyma podzolica DSM 27192 and Apiotrichum porosum DSM 27194

  • Each step was evaluated for its efficiency and all combinations were subsequently compared with direct transesterification of freeze-dried biomass, which was used as the only analysis method for single cell oil (SCO) production with these yeasts in former studies

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Summary

Introduction

Microbial triacylglycerols (SCO) which are produced by oleaginous bacteria, algae, yeast, and fungi are promising sustainable platform chemicals. SCOs are chemically equivalent to plant oils, but can be produced independent of season, climate and location using a wide range of cheap and abundant carbon sources including waste streams from food and other agricultural based industries (Yousuf et al, 2010; Ling et al, 2013; Kot et al, 2017) or renewable carbon sources (Alvarez et al, 1992; Liu et al, 2015; Fei et al, 2016) and do not compete with food or feed. Oleaginous yeast lipids can be used to produce biodiesel, and might find application in food industry and as building blocks for biopolymers (Vasconcelos et al, 2019). Xue et al (2010) cultivated Rhodotorula glutinis on starch wastewater in a 300 L scale and reached 35% lipid content. Thereby, a 6.3 fold higher biodiesel yield was reached compared to standard biodiesel from soybean

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