The dynamic influence of cells on the formation of stable emulsions in organic–aqueous biotransformations

Author:

Collins Jonathan12,Grund Marcel13,Brandenbusch Christoph4,Sadowski Gabriele4,Schmid Andreas13,Bühler Bruno1

Affiliation:

1. grid.5675.1 0000000104169637 Laboratory of Chemical Biotechnology TU Dortmund University Emil-Figge-Str. 66 44227 Dortmund Germany

2. grid.252152.3 0000000419367320 Amherst College 01002 Amherst MA USA

3. grid.7492.8 0000000404923830 Department Solar Materials Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research, UFZ GmbH Permoser Str. 15 04318 Leipzig Germany

4. grid.5675.1 0000000104169637 Laboratory of Thermodynamics TU Dortmund University Emil-Figge-Str.70 44227 Dortmund Germany

Abstract

Abstract Emulsion stability plays a crucial role for mass transfer and downstream processing in organic–aqueous bioprocesses based on whole microbial cells. In this study, emulsion stability dynamics and the factors determining them during two-liquid phase biotransformation were investigated for stereoselective styrene epoxidation catalyzed by recombinant Escherichia coli. Upon organic phase addition, emulsion stability rapidly increased correlating with a loss of solubilized protein from the aqueous cultivation broth and the emergence of a hydrophobic cell fraction associated with the organic–aqueous interface. A novel phase inversion-based method was developed to isolate and analyze cellular material from the interface. In cell-free experiments, a similar loss of aqueous protein did not correlate with high emulsion stability, indicating that the observed particle-based emulsions arise from a convergence of factors related to cell density, protein adsorption, and bioreactor conditions. During styrene epoxidation, emulsion destabilization occurred correlating with product-induced cell toxification. For biphasic whole-cell biotransformations, this study indicates that control of aqueous protein concentrations and selective toxification of cells enables emulsion destabilization and emphasizes that biological factors and related dynamics must be considered in the design and modeling of respective upstream and especially downstream processes.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Biotechnology,Bioengineering

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