Treffer: Yeast fermentation and process engineering for the upcycling of PET monomers and agricultural waste

Title:
Yeast fermentation and process engineering for the upcycling of PET monomers and agricultural waste
Publisher Information:
country:Italy 2025-02-07T00:00:00+01:00
Document Type:
E-Ressource Electronic Resource
Availability:
Open access content. Open access content
info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
Note:
English
Other Numbers:
ITBAO oai:boa.unimib.it:10281/542721
1510694065
Contributing Source:
BICOCCA OPEN ARCH
From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative.
Accession Number:
edsoai.on1510694065
Database:
OAIster

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Agriculture generates significant amounts of waste (consisting of plant or animal residues that are not processed into food or feed) and represents 3.4% of the global plastic demand. Plastic is used in mulching, covering films, nets, irrigation pipes and in post-harvesting operations, such as food packaging containers and sacks. The extensive use of plastic in the agricultural sector leads to the co-existence of many polymers, leading to serious end-of-life problems and to the accumulation of plastic waste in the environment. Among all plastic, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) was the sixth most used plastic in 2019, representing 5% of the global plastic use, and contributing to 17% of the total plastic waste from packaging (24000 tons of waste PET). Current waste PET management solutions either lead to downcycling or are not sustainable from an economic and environmental point of view. The recent advancements in enzymatic-driven recycling are paving the way for the development of new microbial processes for the upcycling of PET main hydrolysis products, ethylene glycol (EG) and terephthalic acid (TPA). While extensive research has been carried out in bacteria, very scarce knowledge is available for yeasts. In the framework of the European Horizon 2020 project Agro2Circular (A2C), this works aimed at investigating EG and TPA metabolism in yeast for the development of large-scale bioprocesses for their conversion into high value-added organic acids. In parallel, an aqueous side stream from the juicing of lemons (Lemon Extract, LE) was evaluated as a potential growth medium for the production of microbial oil. The first chapters of the thesis focus on EG metabolism in yeast. First, we report a shared ability among yeasts to oxidize EG to glycolic acid (GA) and we demonstrate the inability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to utilize EG as a carbon source. We then propose a 10 L bioprocess with the yeast Scheffersomyces stipitis for the production of GA, by simulating a side
Agriculture generates significant amounts of waste (consisting of plant or animal residues that are not processed into food or feed) and represents 3.4% of the global plastic demand. Plastic is used in mulching, covering films, nets, irrigation pipes and in post-harvesting operations, such as food packaging containers and sacks. The extensive use of plastic in the agricultural sector leads to the co-existence of many polymers, leading to serious end-of-life problems and to the accumulation of plastic waste in the environment. Among all plastic, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) was the sixth most used plastic in 2019, representing 5% of the global plastic use, and contributing to 17% of the total plastic waste from packaging (24000 tons of waste PET). Current waste PET management solutions either lead to downcycling or are not sustainable from an economic and environmental point of view. The recent advancements in enzymatic-driven recycling are paving the way for the development of new microbial processes for the upcycling of PET main hydrolysis products, ethylene glycol (EG) and terephthalic acid (TPA). While extensive research has been carried out in bacteria, very scarce knowledge is available for yeasts. In the framework of the European Horizon 2020 project Agro2Circular (A2C), this works aimed at investigating EG and TPA metabolism in yeast for the development of large-scale bioprocesses for their conversion into high value-added organic acids. In parallel, an aqueous side stream from the juicing of lemons (Lemon Extract, LE) was evaluated as a potential growth medium for the production of microbial oil. The first chapters of the thesis focus on EG metabolism in yeast. First, we report a shared ability among yeasts to oxidize EG to glycolic acid (GA) and we demonstrate the inability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to utilize EG as a carbon source. We then propose a 10 L bioprocess with the yeast Scheffersomyces stipitis for the production of GA, by simulating a side