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  4. Evaluation of productive biofilms for continuous lactic acid production
 
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Evaluation of productive biofilms for continuous lactic acid production

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2019-10-01
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Cuny, Laure  
Pfaff, Daniel  
Luther, Jonas  
Ranzinger, Florian  
Ödman, Peter  
Gescher, Johannes 
Guthausen, Gisela  
Horn, Harald  
Hille-Reichel, Andrea  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/10229
Journal
Biotechnology and bioengineering  
Volume
116
Issue
10
Start Page
2687
End Page
2697
Citation
Biotechnology and Bioengineering 116 (10): 2687-2697 (2019-10-01)
Publisher DOI
10.1002/bit.27080
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85071769194
PubMed ID
31161652
In white biotechnology research, the putative superiority of productive biofilms to conventional biotransformation processes based on planktonic cultures has been increasingly discussed in recent years. In the present study, we chose lactic acid production as a model application to evaluate biofilm potential. A pure culture of Lactobacillus bacteria was grown in a tubular biofilm reactor. The biofilm system was cultivated monoseptically in a continuous mode for more than 3 weeks. The higher cell densities that could be obtained in the continuous biofilm system compared with the planktonic culture led to a significantly increased space-time yield. The productivity reached 80% of the maximum value 10 days after start-up and no subsequent decline was observed, confirming the suitability of the system for long-term fermentation. The analysis of biofilm performance revealed that productivity increases with the flow velocity. This is explained by the reduced retention time of the liquid phase in the reactor, and, thus, a minor pH drop caused by the released lactic acid. At low flow velocities, the pH drops to a value where growth and production are significantly inhibited. The biofilm was visualized by magnetic resonance imaging to analyze biofilm thickness. To deepen the understanding of the biofilm system, we used a simple model for cell growth and lactic acid production.
Subjects
lactic acid production
long-term fermentation
magnetic resonance imaging
productive biofilm
simulation
tubular biofilm reactor
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