| Literature DB >> 35207952 |
Dana-Maria Miu1,2, Mihaela Carmen Eremia1, Misu Moscovici1.
Abstract
Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are biodegradable and biocompatible biopolymers. These biomaterials have grown in importance in the fields of tissue engineering and tissue reconstruction for structural applications where tissue morphology is critical, such as bone, cartilage, blood vessels, and skin, among others. Furthermore, they can be used to accelerate the regeneration in combination with drugs, as drug delivery systems, thus reducing microbial infections. When cells are cultured under stress conditions, a wide variety of microorganisms produce them as a store of intracellular energy in the form of homo- and copolymers of [R]-hydroxyalkanoic acids, depending on the carbon source used for microorganism growth. This paper gives an overview of PHAs, their biosynthetic pathways, producing microorganisms, cultivation bioprocess, isolation, purification and characterization to obtain biomaterials with medical applications such as tissue engineering.Entities:
Keywords: characterization; isolation; microbial fermentation; polyhydroxyalkanoates; purification
Year: 2022 PMID: 35207952 PMCID: PMC8875380 DOI: 10.3390/ma15041410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Structure of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs).
PHAs types.
| X | R | Monomer | Monomer Add. | Polymer | Polymer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | H | 3-hydroxypropionate | 3HP | Poly-(3-hydroxypropionate) | 3PHP |
| CH3– | 3-hydroxybutyrate | 3HB | Poly-(3-hydroxybutyrate) | 3PHB | |
| CH3–CH2– | 3-hydroxyvalerate | 3HV | Poly-(3-hydroxyvalerate) | 3PHV | |
| CH3–CH2–CH2– | 3-hydroxycaproate | 3HC | Poly-(3-hydroxyhexanoate) | 3PHC | |
| CH3–(CH2)2–CH2– | 3-hydroxyheptanoate | 3HH | Poly-(3-hydroxyheptanoate) | 3PHH | |
| CH3–(CH2)3–CH2– | 3-hydroxyoctanoate | 3HO | Poly-(3-hydroxyoctanoate) | 3PHO | |
| CH3–(CH2)4–CH2– | 3-hydroxynonanoate | 3HN | Poly-(3-hydroxynonanoate) | 3PHN | |
| CH3–(CH2)5–CH2– | 3-hydroxydecanoate | 3HD | Poly-(3-hydroxydecanoate) | 3PHD | |
| CH3–(CH2)6–CH2– | 3-hydroxyundecanoate | 3HUD | Poly-(3-hydroxyundecanoate) | 3PHUD | |
| CH3–(CH2)7–CH2– | 3-hydroxydodecanoate | 3HDD | Poly-(3-hydroxydodecanoate) | 3PHDD | |
| 2 | H | 4-hydroxybutyrate | 4HB | Poly-(4-hydroxybutyrate) | 4PHB |
| 3 | H | 5-hydroxyvalerate | 5HV | Poly-(5-hydroxyvalerate) | 5PHB |
Figure 2Metabolic pathways of PHAs biosynthesis (Ref. [45], available online: https://www.ecobiomaterial.com/pha/ accessed on 1 December 2021).
Biosynthesis of PHA by various microorganisms.
| Microorganism | Carbon Source | PHA Content | PHA | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Sucrose, | 31.0 | P3HB | [ |
|
| wastewater from olive oil mills | 80 | P3HB | [ |
|
| Glucose | 24.8 | P3HB | [ |
|
| Citric acid, glucose, | 3.0–48.0 | P3HB, scl-mcl-PHA, mcl-PHA | [ |
| various | Acetate, valerate | 2.2–47.6 | 3HB, 3HV, | [ |
|
| Acetic acid, citric acid, glucose, glycerol, succinic acid | 4.0–32.0 | P3HB, | [ |
|
| Acetate, glucose | 8.0–21.0 | 3HB, 3HV | [ |
| Glucose | 76.0 | P3HB | [ | |
| Potato starch, | 46.0 | P3HB | [ | |
|
| Glucose, glycerol, palm oil, sucrose, molasses | (UHMV)P3HB | [ | |
|
| Hydrolyzed starch, | 56.0 | P3HB | [ |
|
| Whey sugars | 72.8 | P-(3HB-co-3HV) | [ |
|
| Glucose, technical oleic acid, waste free fatty acids, waste free flying oil | 25.0 | mcl-PHAs | [ |
|
| Citric acid, glucose, fatty acids | 28.17–39.01 | mcl-PHA | [ |
|
| 1,3-Butanediol, octanoate | 13.5–19.3 | scl-mcl-PHA | [ |
|
| 4-Hydroxyhexanoic acid | 18.6 | scl-mcl-PHA | [ |
|
| Glucose, octanoic acid, undecenoic acid | 61.8–67.1 | mcl-PHA | [ |
| Glucose | 32.1 | mcl-PHA | [ | |
| 4-Hydroxyhexanoic acid | 25.3–29.8 | mcl-PHA | [ | |
| Nonanoic acid | 26.8–75.4 | mcl-PHA | [ | |
|
| Glucose, soybean oil, alcohols, alkanoates | 21–65 | mcl-PHA | [ |
|
| Whey | 35.6 | scl-mcl-PHA | [ |
| Various | Glucose, malt, soy waste, sesame oil | 1.2–82.0 | P3HB | [ |
Figure 3Biomass and mcl-PHA production Reprinted with permission from ref. [65], 2014, Vladu et al., Studia Universitatis.
Fed-batch fermentation for PHA biosynthesis. Reprinted with permission from ref. [68], 2016, Eremia et al., Ovidius Univ. Ann. Of Chem.
| No | Strains | C8 | Fermentation Final | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH | OD 1 | DC 2 (g/L) | |||
| 1 |
| 8.51 | 7.74 | 0.559 | 1.86 |
| 2 | 8.51 | 7.55 | 0.599 | 3.96 | |
| 3 | 8.51 | 7.60 | 0.562 | 3.93 | |
1 Optical Density measured at 550 nm. 2 Dry Cell Weight /L.
Figure 4Biomass and mcl-PHA production with a consortium of microorganisms. Reprinted with permission from ref. [68], 2016, Eremia et al., Ovidius Univ. Ann. Of Chem.
PHAs extraction methods.
| Method | Chemical | Conditions | Purity and Recovery | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solvent extraction | Chloroform | Mixing continuously at 25 °C for 12 h | Purity: 94.0–96.0% | [ |
| Methylene chloride | Mixing continuously t 25 °C for 12 h | Purity: 95–98% | [ | |
| 1,2-Dichloroethane | Mixing continuously at 25 °C for 12 h | Purity: 93–98% | [ | |
| Acetone | Continuous mixing at 120 °C, 7 bar for 20 min under anaerobic conditions, followed by filtering hot solution and cooling it to 4 °C to precipitate polymer | Purity: 98.4% | [ | |
| Medium-chain-length alcohols | In continuous stirred tank reactors, a multi-stage extraction technique is used. Cool the extract to recover the polymer after removing the cell debris | Purity: >98.0% | [ | |
| Hypochlorite digestion | Sodium hypochlorite | Biomass concentration: 10–40 g/L; pH: 8–13.6; Temperature: 0–25 °C; Digestion time: 10 min–6 h; Hypochlorite concentration: 1–10.5% weight/volume ( | Purity: 90–98.0% | [ |
| Sodium hypochlorite and chloroform | Biomass concentration: 1% ( | Purity: 86.0% | [ | |
| Enzyme digestion | Trypsin, bromelain, | Digestion with 2% trypsin (50 °C, pH 9.0, 1 h) or 2% bromelain (50 °C, pH 4.75, 10 h) or 2% pancreatin (50 °C, pH 8.0, 8 h), followed by centrifugation then washing with 0.85% saline solution | Purity: 87.7–90.3% | [ |
Figure 5Post-biosynthesis processing flow of a PHA. Reprinted with permission from ref. [66], 2016, Lupescu et al., Rev.Chim.
Techniques for PHA polymer characterization.
| Characteristics | Method | Typical Conditions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| PHA monomeric | Gas chromatography (GC) | In GC-FID analysis, a BP-20 polar capillary column was used. This column or an HP-5MS capillary column could be used in GS-MS chromatography. | [ |
| Liquid chromatography (LC) | A UV detector at 210 nm and an ion-exclusion organic acid analysis column are used in high-performance liquid chromatography. | [ | |
| PHA polymeric | Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) | Chemical changes were expressed in ppm relative to the remaining chloroform signals as an internal reference (1H NMR: 7.26 ppm; 13C NMR: 77.0 ppm). | [ |
| Matrix assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) | The MALDI-TOF mass spectra is using a delay extraction procedure with ion detection in linear mode: 25 kV applied after 2600 ns with a potential gradient of 454 V/mm and a wire voltage of 25 V. | [ | |
| Molecular | Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) | Samples were diluted to a concentration of 0.5 mg/mL in chloroform and placed in an orbital shaker for 16 h. | [ |
| Thermal | Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) | The samples were evaluated under dry nitrogen. | [ |
| Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) | A sample was placed on platinum pan for each analysis. A nitrogen atmosphere was used at, 50 mL/min, for analysis. | [ | |
| Crystallinity | Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) | The samples are a mixt of 5 mg PHA with 100 mg of KBr and pelletized. The infrared spectra were obtained in the 4000 to 400 cm−1 wavenumber range. | [ |
| X-ray diffraction | The samples were size of 10 mm × 10 mm for testing. The diffractometer with Cu-Kα radiation, wavelength = 1.542 Å, scanning from 10° to 50° in 2θ at a scanning speed of 10°/min. | [ | |
| Mechanical | Mechanical testing machine | Film strips: 135 mm × 22 mm, were tested with static load cell; maximum load of 5KN (Rating = ± 50 N; Max Torque = ± 1.5 N m) for a temperature range of −29 to 82 °C was used. A 125 mm initial gap separation and a separation rate of 12.5 mm min−1 were used for tensile testing at room temperature. | [ |
Figure 6Typical LC–MS total ion chromatograms of (A) PHA monomer standards with concentration of 1.0 mg mL−1 C4, 0.5 mg mL−1 C6, 0.25 mg mL−1 C8, C10, C12, C14 and C16, and 0.1 mg mL−1 IAA; (B) PHA monomers in the polymer extracted from P. putida NBUS12 after hydrolysis; and (C) PHA monomers in the polymer extracted from Pseudomonas sp. TAPHA2 after hydrolysis. Reprinted with permission from ref. [143], 2016, Ge et al., Elsevier.
Figure 7(a) DSC thermograms of mcl-PHAs (inset: melting temperature vs. C6 content in PHAs); (b) TGA curves of mcl-PHAs (c) DSC thermograms of mcl-PHAs and PHBHV. Reprinted with permission from ref. [66], 2016, Lupescu et al., Rev.Chim.
Figure 8FTIR spectra of mcl-PHAs and PHBHV. Reprinted with permission from ref. [66], 2016, Lupescu et al., Rev.Chim.