Tesis
Obtenção e caracterização de linhagem de Escherichia coli adaptada ao glicerol bruto proveniente da síntese de biodiesel por engenharia evolutiva
Fecha
2016-03-31Registro en:
Autor
Miranda, Letícia Passos
Institución
Resumen
Biodiesel is a renewable fuel and its production generate raw glycerol (RG) as main byproduct.
The use of RG as carbon source in microorganism cultivations poses as an alternative to add
value and reduce the environmental impact of this residue. However, RG impurities (salts,
esters, alcohol and soap) can inhibit cell growth. Techniques that aims adapting microorganisms
to environments containing contaminants by adaptive evolution have been employed to
overcome inhibition problems. Adaptation strategies allows imposing a certain selective
pressure upon the population, favoring the appearance of mutants and selection of most
beneficial mutations, which will make the cell more suited to develop itself in a hostile
environment. This work employed Adaptive Evolution methodology to obtain an E. coli K12
strain adapted to RG concentrated by rotary evaporation (RGRota). Cultivations were carried
out in plates (E. coli – USP strain) incubated at 37 ºC, as well as shaken flasks (E. coli – UMinho
strain), kept at 37 ºC and 300 rpm, involving transfers to defined media gradually enriched with
RGRota. Obtained evolved strain as well as the wild-type strain E. coli – UMinho were
characterized in cultivations using 2 L, bench-scale bioreactor, equipped with monitoring and
control system. During shaken flask experiments, growth was followed by optical density (OD)
readings. In bioreactor cultures, samples were withdrawal to analyze cell concentration of the
suspension (OD and dry cell weight), concentrations of glycerol, ethanol and organic acids
(liquid chromatography), concentration of viable cells (colony forming units counting) and
morphology. Cultures characterization were carried out with E. coli – USP in shaken flasks, the
values of maximum specific growth rate (μmax) remained between 0.40 e 0.45 h-1 and they
showed little influence of strain or media composition. These results suggest that the selected
strain did not have differentiated characteristics from the wild-type strain. For E. coli – UMinho,
two adaptation strategies were evaluated: successive transfer during exponential growth phase
(OD = ~2.5) and during stationary growth phase (OD = ~10). In both cases cells evolved,
showing increased μmax values, with more homogeneous populations being observed for
adaptation conducted under the first strategy. After 26 days of adaptation, corresponding to 534
generations, an evolved strain, exhibiting μmax of 0.60 h-1 and capable of growing in medium
containing 29 g/L of glycerol from RGRota was selected by the methodology of successive
transfers in exponential phase. This growth rate was 27.6 % superior to that achieved by the
wild-type strain (0.47 h-1). Evolved and wild-type strains were cultivated in bioreactor,
containing defined medium prepared with GBRota to have 40 g/L of glycerol. The evolved one
maintained μmáx of 0.61 h-1. Acetate formation was observed, with yield of 0.19 g acetate/g
glycerol, which caused growth inhibition and limited biomass yield to 0.26 gbiomass/gglycerol.
When the wild-type strain was cultivated in bioreactor, exponential growth started after 24 h of
lag phase and it presented μmax of 0.28 h-1, biomass yield of 0,39 gbiomass/gglycerol and acetate
yield of 0.19 gacetate/gglycerol. The evolved strain obtained, capable of growing in the biodiesel
production residue, showed a μmax value similar to the best results reported in the literature for
E. coli adaptation in pure glycerol (0.7 h-1), what demonstrates the successful application of the
adaptive evolution methodology. Acetate accumulation can be reduced by Genetic Engineering
techniques to manipulate metabolic pathways and this will lead to development of an industrial
strain which can be employed as a platform of high value products using unrefined glycerol as
substrate.