Isolation and Evaluation of Comparative Ethanol Production Capacity of Yeasts in Presence of Different Carbohydrate Sources from Soil

Authors

  • Preeti K. Dash Department of Botany, Utkal University, VaniVihar, Bhubaneswar-751004, Odisha, India. Author
  • Manas R. Swain 2 Department of Biotechnology, Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, Chennai-600036, India Author
  • Shanti L. Sahoo Department of Botany, Utkal University, VaniVihar, Bhubaneswar-751004, Odisha, India. Author
  • Hrudayanath Thatoi Department of Biotechnology, North Odisha University, Sri Ram Chandra Vihar, Takatpur, Mayurbhanj, Baripada-757003, Odisha, India Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5530/jam.3.4.3

Keywords:

Yeast identification, ethanol production, ethanol tolerance

Abstract

Soil, is an enriched source of natural fermenting microorganisms including yeasts, which are capable of producing bioethanol. The present study was carried out to isolate and identify yeast strains from soil and screentheir ethanol tolerance capacity with a viewto select efficient yeast strains for industrial bioethanol production. Twelve yeast strains (YS1-YS12) were isolated from soil. On the basis of morpho-physiological characteristics and biochemical characterization, these yeast strains were identified as six strains of S.cerevisiae (YS1, YS2, YS4, YS5, YS7 and Y10), three strains of Candidaalbicans (YS3, YS8 and YS9) and three strains each of Trycosporoncapitatum (YS6, YS11 and YS12). Screening of ethanol tolerance capacity of these strains revealed that the two strains YS2 andYS3 tolerated ethanol concentration up to 12 % (v/v), while other two isolated strains YS1 and YS5 showed tolerance up to 10 % of ethanol concentration. The remaining eight strains showed tolerance of 9 % (v/v). Further these identified strains were evaluated for their comparative bioethanol production capacity in different carbohydrate substrates (grape juice, mahua flower extract, molasses, sugarcane juice and saccharified sweet potato root flour broth). Taking different strains and substrate conditions into account, strain YS2 showed in overall the highest ethanol production and ethanol tolerance capacity in comparison to the other strains indicating as an efficient strainfor its use in ethanol production purpose.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2024-01-29

How to Cite

Isolation and Evaluation of Comparative Ethanol Production Capacity of Yeasts in Presence of Different Carbohydrate Sources from Soil. (2024). Journal of Advanced Microbiology, 3(4), 189-197. https://doi.org/10.5530/jam.3.4.3

Similar Articles

1-10 of 57

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.