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Studies on Phloem Sap of Caryota urens and Screening of Yeast Strains for Potential Industrial Applications

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dc.contributor.author Jayathilaka, Nishantha
dc.date.accessioned 2016-09-29T05:53:37Z
dc.date.available 2016-09-29T05:53:37Z
dc.date.issued 2016-09-29T05:53:37Z
dc.identifier.uri http://dr.lib.sjp.ac.lk/handle/123456789/2995
dc.description.abstract Attached en_US
dc.description.abstract Biochemical and microbial changes that occur during fermentation of Caryota urens phloem sap were studied with a view to upgrading the local fermentation industry and to developing new biotechnological process by recognizing yeasts suitable to local conditions. First sample of sap which was taken after keeping the sterilized pot for 10 hours, was apparently unfermented. Paper chromatographic studies done with unfermented sap revealed that the main type of sugar was sucrose, while glucose and fructose were in trace amounts. The content of reducing sugar of unfermented measured by Lane and r sap, Eyon method, was very low (0.14 '*0, w/v) . However this started to increase after 24 hours and reached a maximum value (4.1 '*0, w/v) after 24 hours. The alcohol concentration, measured by ebulliometer, increased only after appreciable quantities of reducing sugar was formed. Maximum alcohol concentration of 7 %, v/v was obtained on the fifth day. The unfermented sap had apH around 7. This decreased substantially and reached a constant value around 4 after the fourth day of fermentation. Decrease in pH coincided well with increase of acidity. Microbial analysis of fermenting sap revealed that the type of organisms present in the sap changed with time. At the beginning of fermentation the sap contained mainly bacteria with a colony count in the order of 107 cells/ml. The yeast cell number increased after 24 hours and reached a maximum of 8 x 107 cells/ml after third day. During the later stages of fermentation, there was a drop in the viable yeast cell count, while the bacteria count increased again to 106 cells/ml. A total of eleven yeast strains were isolated from fermenting phloem sap,some of these were identified as species of Candida, and species of Saccharomyces. A strain which fermented inulin , isolated from fermenting sap and it's identification was not possible. This may be a new strain that has not been reported earlier. These yeast were examined to determine their suitabili ty for high temperature ethanol fermentation and for single cell protein production. When the yeast isolates were screened for their ability to ferment sucrose to ethanol at 40°C only five strains gave substantial yields, (ie more than 50 % of the theoretical maximum). Out of these, three strains were selected for further studies. For the purpose of selecting the best strain for alcohol fermentation at 40°C , certain parameters of these strains were checked. These strains had different growth rates at 40°C when checked using a complete synthetic medium. Strain S 2-5 had the highest growth (2.2 x 106 cells/ml/h) while Sll F-3 had the lowest growth rate (1 x 106 cells/ml/h) . Lower growth rate would favour high ethanol production and hence, Sll F-3 seems to be better in this aspect. When fermentation tests done with these three strains (S 2-5, Sll F-3, S5 MB-29) at different temperatures, 30, 35 and 40°C in complete synthetic medium with 20 % sucrose, the highest alcohol concentration of 14.2 %, v/v was obtained with strain Sll F-3 at 40°C. At 35 °c, all three strains gave more than 9 %, v/v alcohol. At 40°C strain Sll F-3 performed better, giving an alcohol yield of around 9.2 %, vivo With increase of temperature from ,30 -c to 40°C, the ethanol yield of strain Sll F-3 decreased by about 35 % while the strain S5 MB-29 and S 2-5 decreased about 36.5 % and 40 % respectively. When the temperature was increased from 35°C to 40 °c the decreased in ethanol yield was only about 10 % in the case of strain Sll F-3. With the molasses medium, at 40°C, Sll F-3 gave highest alcohol yield of 8.4 %. This value is very much higher than the value obtained with Baker's yeast when used under the same conditions ( 4.7 %) Maximum CO2 productivity (g/h), final ethanol concentration (%,v/v), yield efficiency [(g ethanol/g glucose) / 0.511] anu~axi~umcell growth rate (No.of cells/ml/h) were used as selection criteria of thermotolerant yeast. The strain Sll F-3 which gave highest alcohol yield gave higher values with all the above parameters except growth rate. Four yeast strains which were unable to give high alcohol yields in fermentation experiments were tested for their nitrogen contents and higher growth rates were selected for further studies (85 M-15 and 88 M-15). Their optimum growth temperature was around 35°C. The moisture contents were in the range of 6.5-7.3 %, while the ash contents were around 7 % on dry weight basis. Two strains showed considerably good growth in molasses medium and produced about 4 g cell dry weight/lOa ml of molasses. Amino acid composition of two strains were determined using HPLC method (Pico-Tag) and strain 88 M-15 consisted of 82 % of essential amino acids, while strain (85 M-15 consisted of 70 % essential amino acids from the total amino acid content of each of the strains. Thiamine and riboflavin contents were analyzed by HPLC method (Hagg) and two strains contained about 0.2 mg riboflavin and 0.1 mg thiamine per gram of dried cells. The results suggest that changes during natural fermentation of Caryota urens phloem sap is very much similar to coconut sap fermentation and among the isolated strains, strain 811 F-3 could be regarded as the best strain for production of alcohol at higher temperature while strains 85 M-15 and 88 M-15 which could be grown more
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.title Studies on Phloem Sap of Caryota urens and Screening of Yeast Strains for Potential Industrial Applications en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.date.published 1996


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