Background: Whey is just turning from a waste of milk processing to a renewable raw material in biotechnology for producing single-cell protein, bio-ethanol, or ethyl acetate as an economic alternative. Conversion of whey-borne sugar into ethyl acetate requires yeast biomass as a biocatalyst. A high cell concentration results in a quick ester synthesis, but biomass growth means consumption of sugar at the expense of ester production. Efficient and cost-saving biomass production is thus a practical requirement. Whey is poor in nitrogen and has therefore to be supplemented with a bioavailable N source. Methods: Several aerobic growth tests were performed with Kluyveromyces marxianus DSM 5422 as a potent producer of ethyl acetate in whey-borne media supplemented with various N sources. Preliminary tests were done in shake flasks while detailed studies were performed in a stirred bioreactor.
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