Title: Preparation of Culture Medium
1 Chapter 2 Preparation of Culture
Medium
2Unit 1 Industrial Fermentation Medium
The basic ingredients of media include carbon
source?nitrogen source?inorganic salt ?growth
factor and distilled water etc.
3Medium Development
- To maintain economic competitiveness, low-cost
crude materials are frequently used - Levels of minerals and growth factors may be
critical
4Kinds of culture media
- The source of media constituent
- Complex media
- Synthetic or defined media
- Semi-defined medium
- Physics states
- Liquid medium
- Solid medium
- Semi-solid medium
5- For use
- Basic medium
- Enriched medium
- Differential medium
- Selective medium
- Manufacture intention
- Seed medium
- Ferment medium
6Nutrient sources for industrial fermentation
Carbon energy source nitrogen source O2
other requirements ? Biomass Product
byproducts CO2 H2O heat
7Fermentation media
Nutrient Raw material
Carbon molasses, starch
Nitrogen corn steep liquor, soybean meal, pure ammonia or ammonium salts, urea, nitrate salts, phosphate salts
Vitamins and growth factors biotin, yeast extract, beef extract, corn steep liquor, wheat germ meal
8- 1. Carbon sources
- (1) Starch (corn, wheat, potato )
- Widely used in fermentation industry
- Starch ? ?dextrin ?glucose
- Advantages cheaper than glucose
9- (2) Molasses
- Byproduct of cane or beet sugar production
- A dark viscous syrup containing 50 -75
fermentable sugars (mainly sucrose) with 2
nitrogen, vitamins and minerals - Cheaper
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11- 2. Nitrogen source
- (1) Inorganic nitrogen source
- Ammonia, ammonium and nitrate
- Microbes can utilize it faster.
- After it is utilized, the pH of medium will be
changed. - (NH4)2SO4 ?2NH3 H2SO4
- NaNO3 4H2 ? NH3 2H2O NaOH
12- (2) Organic nitrogen sources
- Urea
- Yeast extract
- Peptones
- Corn steep liquor
- Soybean cake powder
- Peanut powder
- Bran hydrolysis liquid
corn steep liquor powder
133. Trace elements Fe, Mn, B, Zn, Cl, Mo,
Cu 4. Growth factors Small amount of
organic compounds necessary for microbial growth.
e.g. amino acids, vitamins, biotin
Sources normally organic nitrogen source
e.g. corn steep liquor
14 Corn steep Liquor, CSL
- Corn steep liquor is the water extract by-product
resulting from the steeping of corn during the
commercial production of corn starch and other
corn products.
15Different medium for different food products
Chinese distilled spiritsolid medium Fruit
spiritfruit juice or fruit sauce
Beerwort Alcohol starch mash
Amino acid starch mash Citric acidstarch
mash Lactic acidstarch mash
16 Unit 2 Preparation of Starch Sugar Starch
is a large molecule that is made of branching
chains of glucose molecules. It can be broken
down into glucose by hydrolysis.
17- Starch found in grains, potatoes, beans, peas,
cassava - Typically 20-30 amylose, remainder amylopectin
18- Characteristics of starch
- Insoluble in hot water
- Blue complex compound by reaction with iodine.
- Insoluble in 30 of ethanol solution or above.
- Hydrolyzed by acid and enzyme, the ultimate
product is glucose.
19starch granule
20Starch Amylose
- Amylose is a linear glucan with ?1,4 glycosidic
linkages
21Starch Amylopectin
- Amylopectin is a branched glucan with ?1,4 and
?1,6 glycosidic linkages
22Starch Amylopectin
- ?1,6 branch points result in tree-like
structure
- less extended (more compact) than amylose
- larger MW
?1,6 linkages
23- Why should starch be hydrolyzed to glucose?
- Most microbes could not utilize starch directly.
- 2. To obtain sugar from the starch of many
different plants, rather than just sugar beets or
sugar cane.
24Conversion of starch to fermentable sugars 1.
Acid hydrolysis method Starch slurry is
acidified to a pH value and then heated in
a converter under pressure. (C6H10O5)n ?
(C6H10O5)x ? C12H22O11 ?C6H12O6
amylum ? dextrin ? oligosaccharides?glucose
25Due to heat and acid, there are Glucose
combination reaction and
decomposition reaction
26 starch
glucose
oligosaccharide colour content (
difficult to utilize )
(difficult to decolor) Total lost of
glucose 7 lt1
acid
Decomposition reaction
Combination reaction
27- How to avoid combination and
- decomposition reactions occur?
- Concentration of starch
- Concentration of hydrolysis acid
- Reaction temperature
not too high
28- Advantage
- Simple
- Time saving
- Disadvantage
- More by-product, DE value only 90
- Requiring fine starch
- Need corrosion resistant materials
- Need more energy for heating
29Extent of hydrolysis measured using dextrose
equivalents (DE ) value reducing
sugars DE value ? 100
total solids
30- The higher the DE, the more sugars and less
dextrins are present. - The DE value of starch is zero and that of
dextrose is 100.
31A B C
DE
time
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33- 2. Enzyme hydrolysis method
- Which enzyme is used to break down starch
into sugar syrup? - Amylase
- Glucoamylase
- Also called double enzyme hydrolysis
-
34Endoenzymes
- amylase
- attacks 1,4 bonds to produce various
oligosaccharides
Lower MW!
- pullulanase
- attacks 1,6 bonds to produce various
oligosaccharides (amylose fragments)
35Exoenzymes(non-reducing end)
- ?-amylase
- attacks ?1,4 bonds at non-reducing end to
produce maltose
Sweet!
- glucoamylase
- attacks 1,4 bonds at non-reducing end to
produce glucose
High MW!
36Enzymes in processing starch
Enzyme Source ActionÂ
a-amylase Bacillus subtilis Only a-1,4-oligosaccharide links are cleaved to give dextrins with maltose and up to 50 (w/w) glucoseÂ
ß-Amylase Malted barley Only a-1,4-links are cleaved, from non-reducing ends, to give limit dextrins and maltose
Glucoamylase Aspergillus niger a-1,4 and a-1,6-links are cleaved, from the non-reducing ends to give glucose
Pullulanase B. acidopullulyticus Only a-1,6-links are cleaved to give straight-chain maltodextrins
37There are two basic steps in enzymatic starch
conversion liquefaction and saccharification
38Production of Glucose Syrups from Starch
Corn Starch Slurry
Liquefaction Thermostable a-amylase
Gelatinization (105C, 5 min) Dextrinization
(95C, 2h)
Liquefied Starch DE 10-15
Saccharification Glucoamylase (60C, pH
4.0-4.5, 24-72 h)
Glucose Syrups DE 95-96
39 1) Liquefaction Higher temperature
hydrolysis of starch involve a starch
gelatinization process, dissolution of the
nanogram-sized starch granules (swells and
bursts)to form a viscous suspension.Â
40 During liquefaction, long-chained starch
molecules are partial hydrolysis into smaller
branched and linear chains of glucose units
(dextrins) , with concomitant loss in viscosity.
Enzyme a-amylase End-point DE vaule
20?30(why?) iodide ?brown
41- Why should be two steps, liquefaction and
saccharification? - Low DE value
- Retrogradation (ageing)
- Substance size
42QWhats the difference between gelatinization
and retrogradation?
432) Saccharification Involving the production of
glucose and a little maltose by further
hydrolysis. Enzyme glucoamylase End-point DE
is the highest
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45- Advantage
- Higher quality
- Save energy
- Protect environment
- Disadvantage
- Complex operation
- Time consuming
46- How to make high-fructose corn syrup?
- Need 3 steps and 3 enzymes
- alfa-amylase-gtshortening the starch
(Liquefaction) - glucoamylase-gtproduces glucose (saccharification)
- glucose isomerase-gt convert to fructose
(isomerization) -
47- 3. Acid-enzyme combination method
- (Two-stage hydrolysis)
- Slurry is only partially converted by acid and
then treated with an appropriate enzyme or
enzymes until the conversion is complete.
48- 1) Acid-enzyme hydrolysis
- Acid--- liquefaction
- Glucoamylase----- saccharification
- Suitable for starch granule is hard
49- 2) Enzyme- acid hydrolysis
- a-Amylase (thermostable) --- liquefaction
- Acid----- saccharification
- Suitable for starch granule size is irregular
50Production of Glucose from Starch
Items acid acid/enzyme enzyme
DE value 91 95 98
Color 10 0.3 0.2
Processing condition HTP HTP NPT
Energy consuming high high low
By-product more moderate little
Cycle time short moderate long
51Review Questions
1.Which kind of carbon source and nitrogen source
usually used in industry? Cite the advantages
and disadvantages of the different choices. 2.
What is the definition of growth factor and its
main source? 3. What is the significance of
getting sugar by hydrolyzing starch? 4. Compare
the three methods to produce glucose from starch
and the difference between combination reaction
and decomposition reaction, liquefaction and
saccharification.