Engineering Bacterial Biomanufacturing: Characterization and Manipulation of Sphingomonas sp. LM7 Extracellular Polymers

Abstract

Biologically produced materials are an attractive alternative to traditional materials such as metals and plastics and offer improved functionalities such as better biodegradability and biocompatibility. Polysaccharides are an example of a biologically produced materials that can have a range of chemical and physical properties including high stiffness to weight ratios and thermal stability. Polysaccharides synthesized by bacteria can come with many advantages such as being non-toxic and are mechanically robust relative to proteins and lipids, which are also secreted by bacteria to generate a biofilm. Biomanufacturing offers benefits compared to traditional manufacturing including low resource investment and equipment requirements, providing an alternative to sourcing fossil fuel byproducts, and relatively low temperatures needed for production. However, many biologically produced materials require complex and lengthy purification processes before use. This paper 1) identifies the material properties of a novel polysaccharide, dubbed promonan, isolated from the extracellular polymeric substances of Sphingomonas sp. LM7; 2) demonstrates that these properties can be manipulated to suit specific applications; and 3) presents two alternative methods of processing to shorten purification time by more than 50\% while maintaining comparable material properties.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Jun 2024
Accepted
25 Jul 2024
First published
26 Jul 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024, Accepted Manuscript

Engineering Bacterial Biomanufacturing: Characterization and Manipulation of Sphingomonas sp. LM7 Extracellular Polymers

E. W. van Wijngaarden, A. G. Goetsch, I. L. Brito, D. M. Hershey and M. Silberstein, Soft Matter, 2024, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00712C

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