Literature DB >> 26562796

Augmentation of protein-derived acetic acid production by heat-alkaline-induced changes in protein structure and conformation.

Xu Wang1, Yanbo Li2, Junxin Liu3, Nan-Qi Ren4, Jiuhui Qu3.   

Abstract

Waste-derived acetic acid (HAc) is an attractive feedstock for microbe-mediated biofuel production. However, fermentative conversion of HAc from waste-activated sludge (WAS) has low yield because of the high concentration of proteins not readily utilizable by microorganisms without prior hydrolysis. We investigated a combined technology for HAc augmentation during sludge protein fermentation. The maximal HAc yield increased over two-fold, reaching 0.502 ± 0.021 g/g protein (0.36 ± 0.01 g COD/g COD, ∼52% of the total volatile fatty acids) when synthetic sludge protein was heated at 120 °C for 30 min, treated at pH 12 for 24 h, and fermented at pH 9 for 72 h. Comprehensive analysis illustrated that the heat-alkaline pretreatment significantly induced protein fragmentation, simultaneously increasing the efficiency of protein biohydrolysis (from 35.5% to 85.9%) by inducing conformational changes indicative of protein unfolding. Consequently, the native α-helix content was decreased from 67.3% to 32.5% by conversion to an unordered shape, whose content increased from 27.5% to 45.5%; disulfide bonds were cleaved, whereas the main S-S stretching pattern was altered from gauche-gauche-gauche to gauche-gauche-trans, consequently causing increased protein susceptibility to proteolytic hydrolysis (76.3% vs. 47.0%). Economic analysis indicated that anaerobic fermentation with appropriate heat-alkaline pretreatment is a cost-effective approach for waste conversion to energy sources such as HAc.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Acetic acid; Economic analysis; Fermentation; Pretreatment; Protein structure and conformation; Waste activated sludge

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26562796     DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2015.10.055

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Water Res        ISSN: 0043-1354            Impact factor:   11.236


  1 in total

1.  Energy use and carbon footprints differ dramatically for diverse wastewater-derived carbonaceous substrates: An integrated exploration of biokinetics and life-cycle assessment.

Authors:  Yanbo Li; Xu Wang; David Butler; Junxin Liu; Jiuhui Qu
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-03-21       Impact factor: 4.379

  1 in total

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