Production of Biodegradable Polymer from Agro-Wastes in Alcaligenes sp. and Pseudomonas sp

The present study was aimed to evaluate the suitability of agro-wastes and crude vegetable oils for the cost-effective production of poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), to evaluate growth kinetics and PHB production in RZS4 and sp. RZS1 with these carbon substrates and to study the biodegradation of PHB a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2021-04, Vol.26 (9), p.2443
Hauptverfasser: Sayyed, R Z, Shaikh, S S, Wani, S J, Rehman, Md Tabish, Al Ajmi, Mohammad F, Haque, Shafiul, El Enshasy, Hesham Ali
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present study was aimed to evaluate the suitability of agro-wastes and crude vegetable oils for the cost-effective production of poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), to evaluate growth kinetics and PHB production in RZS4 and sp. RZS1 with these carbon substrates and to study the biodegradation of PHB accumulated by these cultures. RZS4 and sp. RZS1 accumulates higher amounts of PHB corn (79.90% of dry cell mass) and rice straw (66.22% of dry cell mass) medium respectively. The kinetic model suggests that the sp. RZS1 follows the Monod model more closely than RZS4. Both the cultures degrade their PHB extract under the influence of PHB depolymerase. Corn waste and rice straw appear as the best and cost-effective substrates for the sustainable production of PHB from RZS4 and sp. RZS1. The biopolymer accumulated by these organisms is biodegradable in nature. The agro-wastes and crude vegetable oils are good and low-cost sources of nutrients for the growth and production of PHB and other metabolites. Their use would lower the production cost of PHB and the low-cost production will reduce the sailing price of PHB-based products. This would promote the large-scale commercialization and popularization of PHB as an ecofriendly bioplastic/biopolymer.
ISSN:1420-3049
1420-3049
DOI:10.3390/molecules26092443