Continuous extraction and concentration of secreted metabolites from engineered microbes using membrane technology

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Abstract

Microalgal cultivation in photobioreactors and membrane separations are both considered sustainable processes. Here we explore their synergistic combination to extract and concentrate a heterologous sesquiterpenoid produced by engineered green algal cells. A hydrophobic hollow-fiber membrane contactor was used to allow interaction of culture broth and cells with a dodecane solvent phase to accumulate algal produced patchoulol. Subsequent continuous membrane extraction of patchoulol from dodecane enabled product concentration in a methanol stream as well as dodecane recovery for its reuse. A structure-based prediction using machine learning was employed to model a process whereby 100% patchoulol recovery from dodecane could be achieved with solvent-resistant nanofiltration membranes. Solvent consumption, E-factor, and economic sustainability were assessed and compared with existing patchoulol production processes. Our extraction and product purification process offers six- and two-orders of magnitude lower solvent consumption compared to synthetic production and thermal-based separation, respectively. Our proposed methodology is transferable to other microbial systems for the isolation of high-value isoprenoid and hydrocarbon products.

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APA

Overmans, S., Ignacz, G., Beke, A. K., Xu, J., Saikaly, P. E., Szekely, G., & Lauersen, K. J. (2022). Continuous extraction and concentration of secreted metabolites from engineered microbes using membrane technology. Green Chemistry, 24(14), 5479–5489. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2gc00938b

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