Pre-incubation conditions determine the fermentation pattern and microbial community structure in fermenters at mild hydrostatic pressure

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Pamela Ceron-Chafla (TU Delft - Sanitary Engineering)

Cristina García-Timermans (Universiteit Gent)

Jo De Vrieze (Universiteit Gent, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)

Ramon Ganigué (Universiteit Gent)

Nico Boon (Universiteit Gent)

Korneel Rabaey (Center for Advanced Process Technology for Urban Resource Recovery (CAPTURE), Universiteit Gent)

Jules B. Van Lier (TU Delft - Sanitary Engineering)

R.E.F. Lindeboom (TU Delft - Sanitary Engineering)

Research Group
Sanitary Engineering
Copyright
© 2022 P.S. Ceron Chafla, Cristina García-Timermans, Jo de Vrieze, Ramon Ganigué, Nico Boon, Korneel Rabaey, J.B. van Lier, R.E.F. Lindeboom
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.28085
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 P.S. Ceron Chafla, Cristina García-Timermans, Jo de Vrieze, Ramon Ganigué, Nico Boon, Korneel Rabaey, J.B. van Lier, R.E.F. Lindeboom
Research Group
Sanitary Engineering
Issue number
7
Volume number
119
Pages (from-to)
1792-1807
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Abstract

Fermentation at elevated hydrostatic pressure is a novel strategy targeting product selectivity. However, the role of inoculum history and cross-resistance, that is, acquired tolerance from incubation under distinctive environmental stress, remains unclear in high-pressure operation. In our here presented work, we studied fermentation and microbial community responses of halotolerant marine sediment inoculum (MSI) and anaerobic digester inoculum (ADI), pre-incubated in serum bottles at different temperatures and subsequently exposed to mild hydrostatic pressure (MHP; < 10 MPa) in stainless steel reactors. Results showed that MHP effects on microbial growth, activity, and community structure were strongly temperature-dependent. At moderate temperature (20°C), biomass yield and fermentation were not limited by MHP; suggesting a cross-resistance effect from incubation temperature and halotolerance. Low temperatures (10°C) and MHP imposed kinetic and bioenergetic limitations, constraining growth and product formation. Fermentation remained favorable in MSI at 28°C and ADI at 37°C, despite reduced biomass yield resulting from maintenance and decay proportionally increasing with temperature. Microbial community structure was modified by temperature during the enrichment, and slight differences observed after MHP-exposure did not compromise functionality. Results showed that the relation incubation temperature—halotolerance proved to be a modifier of microbial responses to MHP and could be potentially exploited in fermentations to modulate product/biomass ratio.