Production of Xylose Enriched Hydrolysate from Bioenergy Sorghum and its Conversion to β-carotene Using an Engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae

2020 
A new bioprocess has been developed that allows for producing beta-carotene from the xylose portion of bioenergy sorghum. Bioenergy sorghum was pretreated in a pilot-scale continuous hydrothermal reactor followed by disc refining. Xylose was extracted using low-severity dilute acid hydrolysis. A xylose yield of 64.9% (17.4 g/L) was obtained by hydrolyzing at 120 degrees C for 5 min with 2% sulfuric acid. The xylose-enriched syrup was separated and concentrated to either 32 g xylose/L (medium-concentrated hydrolysate, MCB) or 66 g xylose/L (high-concentrated hydrolysate, HCB). The non- (NCB), medium-, and high-concentrated xylose syrup were neutralized and fermented to beta-carotene using Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain SR8B, which had been engineered for xylose utilization and beta-carotene production. In HCB, MCB, and NCB cultures, the yeast produced beta-carotene titers of 114.50 mg/L, 93.56 mg/L, and 82.50 mg/L, which corresponds to specific yeast biomass productions of 7.32 mg/g DCW, 8.10 mg/g DCW, and 8.29 mg/g DCW, respectively.
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