Extracellular Biopolymer Production by Acrostalagmus luteoalbusfrom Agro-Industrial Wastes: Toward Sustainable Material Development

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Introduction: Plastic pollution has intensified the search for biodegradable alternatives from renewable sources. Microbial fermentation using agro-industrial residues offers a sustainable strategy for producing biopolymers with reduced environmental impact. This study evaluated the production and characterization of an extracellular biopolymer synthesized by Acrostalagmus luteoalbus using low-cost carbon substrates. Methodology: Fermentations were carried out for eleven weeks using pulp with tejocote peel, fruit peels, and sucrose-based media . Biopolymer yields were quantified, followed by physicochemical characterization , elemental analysis (CHNS) , and thermal assessments (TGA and DSC) to evaluate structural and functional properties. Results: All substrates supported biopolymer synthesis, with pulp with tejocote peel yielding the highest production (~17.10% ± 1.29 at week nine), indicating a strong influence of substrate composition and incubation time . The biopolymer was dark brown, brittle, insoluble in polar and non-polar solvents, and thermally stable , with degradation occurring above 250 °C . CHNS analysis showed a carbon-rich, low-nitrogen composition , while TGA and DSC revealed multi-step degradation and no melting transitions , suggesting a heterogeneous, cross-linked polymeric network . Discussion: The extracellular nature simplifies recovery compared to intracellular polymers and combined with thermal stability and solvent resistance , supports applications in biodegradable packaging, coatings, and biomedical materials. Agro-industrial residues represent a cost-effective and sustainable carbon source for biopolymer production. Conclusions: Acrostalagmus luteoalbus offers a promising platform for producing biodegradable, thermally stable biopolymers from agro-industrial wastes, contributing to circular economy strategies and industrial-scale sustainability efforts.

Article activity feed