F. M. Cunha
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
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Publication
Featured researches published by F. M. Cunha.
Bioresource Technology | 2012
F. M. Cunha; Mateus Esperança; Teresa Cristina Zangirolami; Alberto C. Badino; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas
Sequential solid-state and submerged cultivation with sugarcane bagasse as substrate for cellulase production by Aspergillus niger A12 was assessed by measuring endoglucanase activity. An unconventional pre-culture with an initial fungal growth phase under solid-state cultivation was followed by a transition to submerged fermentation by adding the liquid culture medium to the mycelium grown on solid substrate. For comparison, control experiments were conducted using conventional submerged cultivation. The cultures were carried out in shake flasks and in a 5-L bubble column bioreactor. An endoglucanase productivity of 57 ± 13 IU/L/h was achieved in bubble column cultivations prepared using the new method, representing an approximately 3-fold improvement compared to conventional submerged fermentation. Therefore, the methodology proposed here of a sequential fermentation process offers a promising alternative for cellulase production.
Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2016
Camila Florencio; F. M. Cunha; Alberto C. Badino; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; Eduardo Ximenes; Michael R. Ladisch
Cellulases and hemicellulases from Trichoderma reesei and Aspergillus niger have been shown to be powerful enzymes for biomass conversion to sugars, but the production costs are still relatively high for commercial application. The choice of an effective microbial cultivation process employed for enzyme production is important, since it may affect titers and the profile of protein secretion. We used proteomic analysis to characterize the secretome of T. reesei and A. niger cultivated in submerged and sequential fermentation processes. The information gained was key to understand differences in hydrolysis of steam exploded sugarcane bagasse for enzyme cocktails obtained from two different cultivation processes. The sequential process for cultivating A. niger gave xylanase and β-glucosidase activities 3- and 8-fold higher, respectively, than corresponding activities from the submerged process. A greater protein diversity of critical cellulolytic and hemicellulolytic enzymes were also observed through secretome analyses. These results helped to explain the 3-fold higher yield for hydrolysis of non-washed pretreated bagasse when combined T. reesei and A. niger enzyme extracts from sequential fermentation were used in place of enzymes obtained from submerged fermentation. An enzyme loading of 0.7 FPU cellulase activity/g glucan was surprisingly effective when compared to the 5-15 times more enzyme loadings commonly reported for other cellulose hydrolysis studies. Analyses showed that more than 80% consisted of proteins other than cellulases whose role is important to the hydrolysis of a lignocellulose substrate. Our work combined proteomic analyses and enzymology studies to show that sequential and submerged cultivation methods differently influence both titers and secretion profile of key enzymes required for the hydrolysis of sugarcane bagasse. The higher diversity of feruloyl esterases, xylanases and other auxiliary hemicellulolytic enzymes observed in the enzyme mixtures from the sequential fermentation could be one major reason for the more efficient enzyme hydrolysis that results when using the combined secretomes from A. niger and T. reesei.
Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2015
C. Florencio; F. M. Cunha; Alberto C. Badino; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas
The development of new cost-effective bioprocesses for the production of cellulolytic enzymes is needed in order to ensure that the conversion of biomass becomes economically viable. The aim of this study was to determine whether a novel sequential solid-state and submerged fermentation method (SF) could be validated for different strains of the Trichoderma genus. Cultivation of the Trichoderma reesei Rut-C30 reference strain under SF using sugarcane bagasse as substrate was shown to be favorable for endoglucanase (EGase) production, resulting in up to 4.2-fold improvement compared with conventional submerged fermentation. Characterization of the enzymes in terms of the optimum pH and temperature for EGase activity and comparison of the hydrolysis profiles obtained using a synthetic substrate did not reveal any qualitative differences among the different cultivation conditions investigated. However, the thermostability of the EGase was influenced by the type of carbon source and cultivation system. All three strains of Trichoderma tested (T. reesei Rut-C30, Trichoderma harzianum, and Trichoderma sp INPA 666) achieved higher enzymatic productivity when cultivated under SF, hence validating the proposed SF method for use with different Trichoderma strains. The results suggest that this bioprocess configuration is a very promising development for the cellulosic biofuels industry.
Data in Brief | 2016
Camila Florencio; F. M. Cunha; Alberto C. Badino; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; Eduardo Ximenes; Michael R. Ladisch
The cultivation procedure and the fungal strain applied for enzyme production may influence levels and profile of the proteins produced. The proteomic analysis data presented here provide critical information to compare proteins secreted by Trichoderma reesei and Aspergillus niger when cultivated through submerged and sequential fermentation processes, using steam-explosion sugarcane bagasse as inducer for enzyme production. The proteins were organized according to the families described in CAZy database as cellulases, hemicellulases, proteases/peptidases, cell-wall-protein, lipases, others (catalase, esterase, etc.), glycoside hydrolases families, predicted and hypothetical proteins. Further detailed analysis of this data is provided in “Secretome analysis of Trichoderma reesei and Aspergillus niger cultivated by submerged and sequential fermentation process: enzyme production for sugarcane bagasse hydrolysis” C. Florencio, F.M. Cunha, A.C Badino, C.S. Farinas, E. Ximenes, M.R. Ladisch (2016) [1].
Archive | 2016
Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; F. M. Cunha
Cultivation processes for production of fungal enzymes needed in the bioenergy sector can be conducted using a liquid medium (submerged fermentation, SmF) or a solid medium (solid-state fermentation, SSF). However, several technical and economic issues regarding the implementation of the use of fungal enzymes must be overcome for the biotechnological route to become feasible in large-scale industrial process. The focus of this chapter is about cellulases and the application of these fungal enzymes in the bioenergy sector. Recent developments in the production process of cellulases and application of fungal enzymes in the bioenergy sector are also presented.
Biochemical Engineering Journal | 2015
F. M. Cunha; Mateus Esperança; C. Florencio; V.M Vasconcellos; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; Alberto C. Badino
Waste and Biomass Valorization | 2017
F. M. Cunha; Vanessa Molina de Vasconcellos; C. Florencio; Alberto C. Badino; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas
Bioprocess and Biosystems Engineering | 2014
Mateus Esperança; F. M. Cunha; M. O. Cerri; Teresa Cristina Zangirolami; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; Alberto C. Badino
Simpósio Nacional de Bioprocessos e Simpósio de Hidrólise Enzimática de Biomassa | 2015
F. M. Cunha; Mateus Esperança; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; Alberto Colli Badino Junior
Anais do Congresso Brasileiro de Engenharia Química | 2014
F. M. Cunha; Cristiane Sanchez Farinas; Eduardo Ximenes; Alberto Colli Badino Junior; Michael R. Ladisch
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Vanessa Molina de Vasconcellos
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
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