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Membrane Bioreactor for Simultaneous Synthesis and Fractionation of Oligosaccharides

Galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS) are prebiotic sugars obtained enzymatically from lactose and used in food industry due to their nutritional advantages or technological properties. Selective mass transport and enzymatic synthesis were integrated… Click to show full abstract

Galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS) are prebiotic sugars obtained enzymatically from lactose and used in food industry due to their nutritional advantages or technological properties. Selective mass transport and enzymatic synthesis were integrated and followed using a membrane bioreactor, so that selective removal of reaction products may lead to increased conversions of product-inhibited or thermodynamically unfavorable reactions. GOS syntheses were conducted on lactose solutions (150 g·L−1) at 40 °C and 10 Uβ-galactosidase.mL−1, and sugar fractionation was performed by cellulose acetate membranes. Effects of pressure (20; 24 bar) and crossflow velocity (1.7; 2.0; 2.4 m·s−1) on bioreactor performance were studied. Simultaneous GOS synthesis and production fractionation increased GOS production by 60%, in comparison to the same reactions promoted without permeation. The presence of a high-molecular-weight solute, the enzyme, in association with high total sugar concentration, leads to complex selective mass transfer characteristics. Without the enzyme, the membrane presented tight ultrafiltration characteristics, permeating mono- and disaccharides and retaining just 25% of trisaccharides. During simultaneous synthesis and fractionation, GOS-3 were totally retained, and GOS-2 and monosaccharides were retained at 80% and 40%, respectively. GOS synthesis—hydrolysis evolution was strongly dependent on crossflow velocity at 20 bar but became fairly independent at 24 bar.

Keywords: membrane bioreactor; synthesis; fractionation; synthesis fractionation; simultaneous synthesis

Journal Title: Membranes
Year Published: 2022

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