EXOPOLYSACCHARIDE SYNTHESIS BY Bacillus thuringiensis HA1 USING CARBON SOURCES FROM THE SUGARCANE AGROINDUSTRY

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47163/agrociencia.v60i1.3524

Palabras clave:

levan, biopolymers, molasses, commercial sucrose, submerged culture.

Resumen

Exopolysaccharides are biopolymers produced by bacteria and have characteristics that make them suitable for applications in the pharmaceutical, environmental, and food industries. However, exopolysaccharide production faces challenges like high production costs. Therefore, strategies such as culture conditions improvement, strain selection, and the use of low-cost carbon sources have emerged as alternatives to improve exopolysaccharide production. In this work, the capability of Bacillus thuringiensis HA1 to produce exopolysaccharides using low-cost carbon sources (commercial sucrose, molasses, and panela) was explored. The production conditions were evaluated as follows: fermentation time (0–86 h), initial pH (5–9), temperature (31–43 °C), carbon sources (commercial sucrose, molasses, and panela), and concentration of carbon sources (50–350 g L-1). The settled conditions to assess the carbon sources were 60 h, 37 °C, and pH 7.5. Exopolysaccharide production was higher using commercial sucrose (23.54 mg mL-1), followed by molasses (8.62 mg mL-1) and panela (6.37 mg mL-1). The sucrose sample showed similarity to a glucan-type exopolysaccharide, since the presence of peaks at 1000–1200 is characteristic of C–O–C glycosidic linkages, while the molasses sample showed similarity to the standard levan. These results were achieved without pretreating the carbon sources, thus allowing the process to be economically feasible. To date, Bacillus thuringiensis has not been reported as a producer of two types of exopolysaccharides using different carbon sources.

Biografía del autor/a

Jesús David Castilla-Marroquín, Colegio de Postgraduados Campus Córdoba

Ingeniero químico con especialidad en química ambiental. Maestro en ciencias en Innovación Agroalimentaria Sustentable, con enfoque a biotecnología, biorreactores, fermentaciónes y biopolimeros

Jose Andrés Herrera-Corredor, Colegio de Postgraduados Campus Córdoba

Andres Herrera currently works at the Campus Córdoba, Colegio de Postgraduados. Andres does research in Food Science, Sensory Science and Cereals Technology

Disciplines

Software Engineering

·

Food Science

·

Instrumentation Engineering

Neith Araceli Pacheco-López, Centro de Investigación y Asistencia en Tecnología y Diseño del Estado de Jalisco

Doctor in Macromolecular materials and biotechnology. I have degrees from CBL1 University in France and UAMI in Mexico. I have been recognized by the National System of Researchers (SNI) as a National Researcher in Mexico since 2012, actually in the first level. I am responsible for the Food Safety and Traceability Laboratory at CIATEJ in the Yucatán unit, with a team of 8-12 researchers. I have over 12 years of experience in food safety and quality; food biotechnology research and innovation, specifically involving biomolecule characterization, biopolymers, and phytochemicals; and sensorial analysis for new food inventions. I work with development of chromatography techniques for bioactive compound identification and quantification, including sustainable innovation using byproducts

Ricardo Hernández-Martínez, Colegio de Postgraduados Campus Córdoba

Currently Works at SECIHTI (Colegio de Postgraduados Campus Córdoba, México). Ricardo does research in Biotechnology and environmental bioprocess. Current Interests: Solid State Fermentation (SSF) and Submerged Fermentation (SF) for the biomass and spores (entomopathogenic fungi, bacteria), and microbial metabolite production. Also, the development of bioprocesses that impacts the development of the sugar agro-industry for its diversification.

Archivos adicionales

Publicado

15-01-2026

Número

Sección

Biotecnología