Lignocellulosic hydrolysate composition influences contamination profiles in ethanol production
Journal article, 2025

Second-generation ethanol is a promising renewable alternative to traditional transportation fuels. However, its large-scale production via fermentation faces economic and technical challenges, including microbial contamination. This study evaluates how ten common lignocellulosic inhibitors, formed during biomass pretreatment, affect the growth of the industrial bioethanol yeast strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae PE-2 and two bacterial contaminants Lactiplantibacillus plantarum I4a and Limosilactobacillus fermentum I3a. The bacteria demonstrated greater resilience to furanic compounds than yeast. In heterofermentative bacteria, furanic compounds stimulated growth, increasing the maximum specific growth rate (μmax) from 0.35 h−1 (control) to 0.46 h−1 and 0.40 h−1 with 1 g·L−1 HMF and 1.5 g·L−1 furfural, respectively. In contrast, yeast μmax dropped to 35 % of the control when exposed to furfural. Organic acids, particularly formic acid, were the most inhibitory to both yeast and bacteria, due to their low pKa and high membrane permeability, blocking completely the growth of both bacteria and yeast at 2 g·L1. S. cerevisiae PE-2 exhibited greater tolerance to phenolic compounds, maintaining a relative µmax of 50 % compared to the control, even at low concentrations that were sufficient to inhibit bacterial growth. These findings highlight the critical role of hydrolysate composition in shaping contamination profiles, as yeast and bacteria display distinct inhibitor tolerances. Targeting bacterial contaminants and selecting robust yeast strains capable of withstanding inhibitory conditions are essential strategies to improve fermentation efficiency, addressing a key barrier to the economic viability of second-generation ethanol production.

Ethanol fermentation

Robustness quantification

Limosilactobacillus fermentum

Bacterial contamination

Lactiplantibacillus plantarum

Author

Thamiris Guerra Giacon

University of Sao Paulo (USP)

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Nathália Vilela

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Cecilia Trivellin

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Harvard University

Thiago Olitta Basso

University of Sao Paulo (USP)

Lisbeth Olsson

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Bioresource technology

09608524 (ISSN) 18732976 (eISSN)

Vol. 435 132838

Quantification of the robustness of industrial yeasts in presence of contaminating bacteria

Coordination of Superior Level Staff Improvement, 2023-10-01 -- 2025-02-28.

São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) (2023/07553-7), 2023-10-01 -- 2025-02-28.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Microbiology

DOI

10.1016/j.biortech.2025.132838

Related datasets

Quantification-of-microbial-robustness [dataset]

URI: https://github.com/cectri/Quantification-of-microbial-robustness

More information

Latest update

8/11/2025