Process Engineering of Clostridium Tyrobutyricum to Improve Butyric Acid Production
AIChE Annual Meeting
2014
2014 AIChE Annual Meeting
Student Poster Sessions
Undergraduate Student Poster Session: Food, Pharmaceutical, and Biotechnology
Monday, November 17, 2014 - 10:00am to 12:30pm
Butyric acid production by Clostridium tyrobutyricum has drawn increasing attention because it is widely used in food and pharmaceutical industries. Clostridium tyrobutyricum mutant PAK-Em with inactivated ack gene, encoding acetate kinase, was used in fermentations to produce butyric acid from glucose. A fibrous-bed bioreactor (FBB) was used to immobilize and adapt PAK-Em cells, which boosted the butyric acid yield to 0.38 g/g at pH 5.5 and 0.42 g/g at pH 6.5. PAK-EM produced much more butyric acid (23.2 g/L vs. 17.2 g/L at pH 5.5 and 63.0 g/L vs. 15.7 g/L at pH 6.5) than the wild type, but had a lower specific growth rate (0.08 h-1 vs. 0.11 h-1 at pH 5.5 and 0.09h-1 vs. 0.10 h-1 at pH 6.5) in the FBB. The integration of metabolic engineering and process parameter optimization increased butyric acid production significantly.