An Overview of Current Pretreatment Methods Used to Improve Lipid Extraction from Oleaginous Microorganisms
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Microbial Cell Wall and Lipid Composition
3. Conventional Methods for Total Lipid Extraction
3.1. Bligh & Dyer Method
3.2. Folch Method
4. Pretreatment of Oleaginous Microbial Biomass to Extract Lipids
4.1. Mechanical Pretreatment Methods
4.1.1. Oil or Expeller Pressing
4.1.2. Bead Milling
4.1.3. High-Pressure Homogenization
4.1.4. High-Speed Shearing Homogenization
4.1.5. Ultrasonication
4.1.6. Microwave Irradiation
4.1.7. Autoclaving
4.1.8. Pulsed Electric Field
4.1.9. Laser
4.1.10. Acid-Catalyzed Hot-Water
4.2. Non-Mechanical Pretreatment Methods
4.2.1. Enzymatic Pretreatment
4.2.2. Other Emerging Methods for the Extraction of Lipids from Oleaginous Microorganisms
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Oleaginous Micro-Organism | Lipid Extraction Method | Pretreatment of Cells | Lipid Content (%, w/w) | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Oleaginous yeasts | ||||
Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae HIMPA1 | Bligh & Dyer method | Ultrasonication at 40 Hz for 5 min | 59.7 | [39] |
Organic-solvent n-hexane | Acid-catalyzed hot-water treatment | 61.9 | ||
Organic-solvent n-hexane | Microwave irradiation | 67.4 | ||
Organic-solvent n-hexane | Rapid ultrasonication-microwave treatment | 70.1 | ||
Cryptococcus curvatus (DSM 70022) | Solvent extraction (chloroform-methanol; 2:1, v/v) | Dried biomass, Acid-catalyzed hot-water treatment. (2 mL of 3 M HCl and then digested at 60 °C for 2 h), Sonication for 30 s at 30 kHz | NA | [40] |
46 | ||||
Rhodotorula glutinis (DSM 10134) | ||||
48.9 | ||||
Yarrowia lipolytica (DSM 8218) | ||||
C. curvatus MUCL 29819 | Solvent extraction (chloroform-methanol; 1:1, v/v) | Dried yeast cells, Bead milling (glass beads, diameter 0.5 mm) | 30.3 | [41] |
Sporidiobolus pararoseus KM281507 | Bligh & Dyer method | Vortexed with glass beads, sonicated at 70 Hz for 30 min | 30.7 | [42] |
S. pararoseus KX709872 | Bligh & Dyer method | Vortexed with glass beads for 30 min in the presence of 100 ppm ascorbic acid and sonicated for 30 min in ultrasonication bath | 56.6 | [43] |
Naganishia liquefaciens NITTS2 | Solvent extraction (chloroform-methanol; 1:1, v/v) | Ultrasonication at 20 kHz for 20 min at 40 °C | 55.8 | [44] |
C. curvatus MTCC 2698 | Bligh & Dyer method | Sonication at 40 kHz for 2 min | 28.3 | [45] |
Cryptococcus vishniaccii | Bligh & Dyer method | Sonication at 20 kHz for 5 min | 52.3 | [46] |
Rhodosporidium toruloides and Lipomyces starkeyi | Bligh & Dyer method | Acid (2 mol/L of HCl) | 25 and 34 | [47] |
None | 23 and 7 | |||
Folch method | Acid (2 mol/L of HCl) | 34 and 48 | ||
Enzymatic | 31 and 37 | |||
None | 42 and 47 | |||
Oleaginous microalgae | ||||
Schizochytrium sp. ATCC20888 | Soxhlet extraction | Enzymatic lysis with alkaline protease | 63 | [48] |
Chlorella vulgaris/Cyanobacteria leptolyngbya | Solvent extraction with hexane or chloroform-methanol (1:1, v/v) | Sonicated in an ultrasonic reactor with a clamp-on transducer | 16 | [48] |
Phaeodactylum tricornutum | Solvent extraction (chloroform-methanol; 1:1, v/v) | Lyophilization | 47 | [49] |
Scenedesmus sp. | Solvent extraction (chloroform methanol; 1:1, v/v) | Enzymatic treatment with cellulase, xylanase and pectinase | 86.4 (lipid recovery) | [50] |
Tetraselmis sp. KCTC12429BP | Solvent extraction with mixture of hexane and polar solvents (ethanol, isopropanol, methanol, tetrahydrofuran, acetone, acetonitrile) | Lyophilization | 5.5 with Chloroform-methanol, 5.2 with hexane-methanol | [51] |
Aurantiochytrium sp. KRS101 | Solvent extraction with chloroform, chloroform-methanol (2:1, v/v), hexane, hexane-isopropanol (3:2, v/v), methanol and ethanol | High shear mixer (HSM) | High non-esterifiable lipids with chloroform-methanol and esterifiable lipids with chloroform | [52] |
Scenedesmus obliquus | Solvent (chloroform-methanol; 2:1, v/v) | Drying of biomass by sun, freeze, and oven followed by microwave, sonication, autoclaving, osmotic shock (10% NaCl) | Highest lipid content of 25.4% was obtained after freeze-drying followed by microwave digestion | [53] |
Scendesmus dimorphus | Solvent extraction with ethanol (6 mL/g dry algae), Fractionation with (ethanol: hexane: water; 1:1:1, v/v/v) | Extraction autoclave equipped with condenser, mechanical stirring and thermocouple | Oil extraction by fractional method gave neutral lipid (97) with polar lipids (2) | [54] |
Oleaginous fungus | ||||
Mucor circinelloides URM 4182 | Solvent extraction With ethanol (96%) | Microwave irradiation at 60 °C for 30 min | 31.2 | [55] |
Cunninghamella echinulata | Soxhlet extraction with diethyl ether anhydrous at 50 °C | Dried biomass ground in a laboratory blender | 22.2 | [56] |
M. circinelloides VI04473 and Mortierella alpina UBOCC-A-112046 | Folch method, Bligh & Dyer method | Acid hydrolysis with 2 mL 3 N HCl (incubation of the sample at 80 °C for 1 h), bead beating and homogenization (4.0 m/s for 60 s) | NA | [57] |
M. circinelloides VI 04473, Umbelopsis isabellina UBOCC-A-101350 and Penicillium glabrum FRR 419 | Lewis extraction | Freeze-dried, biomass, glass beads in high-speed benchtop homogenizer at 6.5 m/s, for 1 min cycle length and 6 cycles | Highest lipid content was obtained from U. isabellina at 30 °C | [58] |
Alternaria alternata, Cladosporium cladosporioides, Epicoccum nigrum, Fusarium oxysporum, Aspergillus parasiticus and Emericella nidulans var. lata | Folch method | NA | Highest lipid content (40.8) from A. alternata | [59] |
Aspergillus tubingensis TSIP9 | Folch method | Slurry of biomass and chloroform-methanol sonicated for 30 min | 39.5 mg per gram dry substrate (gds) | [35] |
Oleaginous bacteria | ||||
Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1 | Bligh & Dyer method | Freeze-dried cells, vortexed | 1.6 with wild strain, 12.4 with genetically modified strain | [60] |
Rhodococcus opacus | Folch method | Homogenized with chloroform-methanol (2:1, v/v), followed by shaking | 71 with synthetic medium | [36] |
Bacillus subtilis HB1310 | Bligh & Dyer method | 4 M HCl, incubation at 80 °C for 1 h | 39.8 | [61] |
Rhodopseudomonas palustris (strain 42OL) | Solvent extraction methanol-chloroform (1:2, v/v) | Grinding of freeze-dried bacterial cells in a mortar with sand | 22 to 39 | [62] |
Bacillus sp. V10 | Bligh & Dyer method | Freeze-drying of the cells | 7.4 | [63] |
R. opacus | Folch method | Homogenized with chloroform-methanol (2:1 v/v), followed by shaking | 65.8 | [64] |
Pretreatment Methods | Mode of Action | Energy Consumption | Scale-Up Possibility | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ultrasonication | Cavitation, acoustic streaming and liquid shear stress | Medium/low | Yes/no | Less processing time, lower solvent consumption, greater penetration of solvent into cellular compartment | High power consumption, difficult to scale up | [23,91,92,96,97,120,121] |
Oil/expeller press | Mechanical compaction and shear forces | High | Yes | Easy process, no solvent | Large amount of sample required, slow process, unsuitable for samples with high moisture content | [67,122] |
High-speed homogenization | Cavitation and shear forces | High/medium | Yes | Simple process, effective, short contact time | High energy consumption, increased temperature during operation | [20,85,86] |
High-pressure homogenization | Cavitation and shear forces | High/medium | Yes | Solvent-free, simple process, effective, short contact time | High maintenance cost, less efficient with filamentous microorganisms, no residual effect | [22,123,124,125] |
Bead milling | Mechanical compaction and shear forces | High/medium | Yes | Solvent-free, suitable for samples with high moisture content | Low efficiency with rigid cells, depending on various parameters such as bead size and agitation, no residual effect | [19,72,73,75,103,124,126,127,128] |
Microwave irradiation | Temperature increase, molecular energy increase | High/medium | Yes/no | Eco-friendly, reduced processing time and solvent consumption | Filtration or centrifugation is necessary to remove the solid residue, unsuitable for non-polar or volatile compounds | [78,95,106,107,128,129,130] |
Pulsed electric field treatment | Pore formation due to electric waves | High | Yes/no | Relatively simple, high energetic efficiency, relatively fast | High maintenance costs, high temperature, dependence on medium composition, decomposition of fragile compounds | [20,56,107,108,109,110,111] |
Enzymatic treatment | Specific enzyme-substrate interaction | Low | Yes | Simple, high energetic efficiency | Long processing time and high capital cost | [22,25,71,123,125,130,131,132,133] |
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Patel, A.; Mikes, F.; Matsakas, L. An Overview of Current Pretreatment Methods Used to Improve Lipid Extraction from Oleaginous Microorganisms. Molecules 2018, 23, 1562. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules23071562
Patel A, Mikes F, Matsakas L. An Overview of Current Pretreatment Methods Used to Improve Lipid Extraction from Oleaginous Microorganisms. Molecules. 2018; 23(7):1562. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules23071562
Chicago/Turabian StylePatel, Alok, Fabio Mikes, and Leonidas Matsakas. 2018. "An Overview of Current Pretreatment Methods Used to Improve Lipid Extraction from Oleaginous Microorganisms" Molecules 23, no. 7: 1562. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules23071562
APA StylePatel, A., Mikes, F., & Matsakas, L. (2018). An Overview of Current Pretreatment Methods Used to Improve Lipid Extraction from Oleaginous Microorganisms. Molecules, 23(7), 1562. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules23071562