March 1, 2012
Journal Article

Acetone-butanol Fermentation of Marine Macroalgae

Abstract

Mannitol and laminarin, which are present at high concentrations in the brown macroalga Saccharina spp., a type of kelp, are potential biochemical feedstocks for butanol production. To test their bioconversion potential, aqueous extracts of the kelp Saccharina spp., mannitol, and glucose (a product of laminarin hydrolysis) were subjected to acetone-butanol fermentation by Clostridium acetobutylicum (ATCC 824). Both mannitol and glucose were readily fermented. Mixed substrate fermentations with glucose and mannitol resulted in diauxic growth of C. acetobutylicum with glucose depletion preceding mannitol utilization. Fermentation of kelp extract exhibited triauxic growth, with an order of utilization of free glucose, mannitol, and bound glucose, presumably laminarin. The lag in laminarin utilization reflected the need for enzymatic hydrolysis of this polysaccharide into fermentable sugars. The butanol and total solvent yields were 0.12 g/g and 0.16 g/g, respectively, indicating that significant improvements are still needed to make industrial-scale acetone-butanol fermentations of seaweed economically feasible.

Revised: April 10, 2012 | Published: March 1, 2012

Citation

Huesemann M.H., L. Kuo, L.A. Urquhart, G.A. Gill, and G. Roesijadi. 2012. Acetone-butanol Fermentation of Marine Macroalgae. Bioresource Technology 108. PNNL-SA-83984. doi:10.1016/j.biortech.2011.12.148