Foods, Vol. 15, Pages 1100: Toward Sustainable Xanthan Gum Production: Waste-Derived Substrates, Fermentation Optimization, and Eco-Friendly Extraction Approaches

Fuente: Foods - Revista científica (MDPI)
Foods, Vol. 15, Pages 1100: Toward Sustainable Xanthan Gum Production: Waste-Derived Substrates, Fermentation Optimization, and Eco-Friendly Extraction Approaches
Foods doi: 10.3390/foods15061100
Authors:
Peer Mohamed Abdul
Setyo Budi Kurniawan
Rosiah Rohani
Nor Sakinah Mohd Said
Rozieffa Roslan
Muhammad Fauzul Imron

Sustainable xanthan gum (XG) production is increasingly prioritized as global demand rises, and conventional processes face economic and environmental constraints. Traditional manufacturing depends heavily on refined sugars, intensive fermentation control, and solvent-based purification, which elevate production costs and ecological impact. This review highlights recent advancements designed to improve sustainability across the XG value chain, focusing on alternative substrates, optimized fermentation, and greener extraction methods. Agricultural residues, food-processing waste, lignocellulosic biomass, and industrial effluents have emerged as promising low-cost substrates that reduce reliance on refined sugar sources while supporting waste valorization. Pretreatment strategies, such as acid hydrolysis, enzymatic processing, and integrated biological–chemical methods, significantly enhance the accessibility of complex biomass for microbial fermentation. Concurrently, improvements in strain selection, metabolic engineering, and process control have increased XG yield, molecular weight, and rheological performance. Environmentally friendly extraction technologies, including ultrasound-assisted extraction, pulsed electric fields, membrane filtration, and electro-dewatering, further reduce solvent consumption and energy demand in downstream processing. However, challenges persist, including substrate variability, formation of inhibitory compounds, strain instability, and regulatory considerations for waste-derived substrates or genetically modified strains. Future progress will rely on integrating bioprocess intensification, genetic engineering, and techno-economic assessment to build scalable, low-impact, and circular XG production systems.