| Literature DB >> 29963354 |
Hui Wang1, Kun Jiang1, Ziwei Zhu1, Wankui Jiang1, Zhangong Yang1, Shijun Zhu1, Jiguo Qiu1, Xin Yan1, Jian He1, Qin He1, Qing Hong1.
Abstract
Microbial inoculant preparation is a prerequisite for its application in large-scale bioremediation. In the present study, Sphingomonas sp. DC-6, an efficient acetochlor-degrading strain, was used to investigate the process of preparing the inoculant. Optimization of submerged fermentation (SmF) by response surface methodology (RSM) resulted in a first 22% increase in biomass of liquid inoculant. Then, a biomass increase of 2.18 times with 14.58% shortened incubation period was further obtained in optimized medium using a 7.5-l bioreactor. However, less than 0.4% viable cells in liquid inoculant survived after 180-days storage. Thus, optimized spray drying conditions were subsequently employed for the production of high viability powder (2.11 × 1012 cfu g- 1 powder) without additive and its survival ratio (SR) after 180-days storage was still maintained at 90.5%. Both the 180-days stored powder and the original powder showed the same degradation performance, being able to completely degrade 200 mg l- 1 acetochlor within 48 h. This study demonstrated that strain DC-6 was suitable for industrial production of bacteria powder and provided a potential approach for the preparation of pesticide-degrading microbial inoculant.Entities:
Keywords: Acetochlor herbicides; Fed-batch fermentation; Microbial inoculant; Response surface methodology; Sphingomonas sp. DC-6; Spray drying
Year: 2018 PMID: 29963354 PMCID: PMC6019653 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-018-1324-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406