Waste frying oil hydrolysis and lipase production by cold-adapted Pseudomonas yamanorum LP2 under non-sterile culture conditions

Non-sterile culture technique is currently used in some microbial processes. However, there is no study on the use of this technique in the production of microbial lipases and hydrolysis of waste frying oils. This study was conducted to hydrolyse waste frying oils and produce lipase under non-steril...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEnvironmental technology p. 1
Main Authors Komesli, Senba, Akbulut, Sumeyya, Arslan, Nazli Pinar, Adiguzel, Ahmet, Taskin, Mesut
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 30.03.2020
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Summary:Non-sterile culture technique is currently used in some microbial processes. However, there is no study on the use of this technique in the production of microbial lipases and hydrolysis of waste frying oils. This study was conducted to hydrolyse waste frying oils and produce lipase under non-sterile culture conditions using locally isolated cold-adapted bacteria. Of 75 bacterial isolates, the psychrotolerant LP2 (Genbank number: KU711080) was determined to have the highest lipase activity. It was found that a combination of restricted nutrient availability, low temperature and high inoculum volume prevented microbial contaminants under non-sterile conditions. The most favourable parameters for lipase production under both sterile and non-sterile conditions were 15°C temperature, pH 8, 30 mL/L inoculum volume, 40 mL/L waste frying oil concentration, 10 mL/L Tween-80 and 72 h incubation time. The maximum lipase activities in sterile and non-sterile media were determined as 93.3 and 96.8 U/L, respectively. The present process designed for enzyme production and waste oil hydrolysis can reduce the cost of cultivation medium as well as energy consumption and workload. The potential of cold-adapted bacteria to produce lipase and hydrolyse waste oils under non-sterile culture conditions was first tested in the current study.
ISSN:1479-487X