Abstract

Arachidonic acid (ARA) is an essential fatty acid in animal nutrition. The filamentous fungus Mortierella alpina has been widely used for production of ARA. The strain M. alpina PRAO7-10 was isolated from a soil sample in northern Thailand. Seven parameters—temperature, pH, percentage of medium volume per flask volume (% v/v) and glucose, KNO3, K2HPO4 and soy isolate concentrations—affected the biomass and ARA production of this fungus and were determined using the Plackett-Burman statistical design technique. The results revealed that temperature and % v/v played a significant role in the biomass and ARA production while glucose and soy isolate only affected the ARA production. Therefore, they were chosen for optimization using a central composite design and response surface methodology to maximize the dried cell weight (DCW) and ARA production. The optimal values for the temperature, % v/v, glucose concentration and soy isolate concentration were 25.06 °C, 14.16%, 6.67% and 0.48%, respectively. Under these optimal culture conditions, the maximum DCW and ARA production were 52.64 g/L and 6.76 g/L, respectively. Validation of the optimal conditions showed that deviations in DCW and ARA of the experimental data from the predicted values were 1.72% and 2.42%, respectively, suggesting the suitability of the model employed and that the experimental designs were effective for the optimization of the DCW and ARA production.

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