DOAJ Open Access 2021

Glycolipid Biosurfactant Production from Waste Cooking Oils by Yeast: Review of Substrates, Producers and Products

Janis Liepins Karina Balina Raimonda Soloha Ieva Berzina Liva Kristiana Lukasa +1 lainnya

Abstrak

Biosurfactants are a microbially synthesized alternative to synthetic surfactants, one of the most important bulk chemicals. Some yeast species are proven to be exceptional biosurfactant producers, while others are emerging producers. A set of factors affects the type, amount, and properties of the biosurfactant produced, as well as the environmental impact and costs of biosurfactant’s production. Exploring waste cooking oil as a substrate for biosurfactants’ production serves as an effective cost-cutting strategy, yet it has some limitations. This review explores the existing knowledge on utilizing waste cooking oil as a feedstock to produce glycolipid biosurfactants by yeast. The review focuses specifically on the differences created by using raw cooking oil or waste cooking oil as the substrate on the ability of various yeast species to synthesize sophorolipids, rhamnolipids, mannosylerythritol lipids, and other glycolipids and the substrate’s impact on the composition, properties, and limitations in the application of biosurfactants.

Penulis (6)

J

Janis Liepins

K

Karina Balina

R

Raimonda Soloha

I

Ieva Berzina

L

Liva Kristiana Lukasa

E

Elina Dace

Format Sitasi

Liepins, J., Balina, K., Soloha, R., Berzina, I., Lukasa, L.K., Dace, E. (2021). Glycolipid Biosurfactant Production from Waste Cooking Oils by Yeast: Review of Substrates, Producers and Products. https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation7030136

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2021
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.3390/fermentation7030136
Akses
Open Access ✓