Butyrate fermentation
Butyrate fermentation is a process that produces butyric acid via anaerobic bacteria. This process occurs commonly in clostridia which can be isolated from many anaerobic environments such as mud, fermented foods, and intestinal tracts or feces. Clostridium can ferment carbohydrates into butyric acid, producing byproducts including hydrogen gas, carbon dioxide, and acetate. Butyrate fermentation is currently being utilized in the production of a variety of biochemicals and biofuels.
Butyrate in humans originates from the anaerobic microbes that ferment dietary fibers in the lower intestinal tract. Butyrate plays an important role in immune and inflammatory responses, as well as the formation of the intestinal barrier. The presence of short-chain fatty acids lowers the pH of the gut allowing optimal growth for butyrate-producing bacteria. The two major metabolic pathways used for butyrate fermentation are butyryl-CoA phosphorylation and acetate CoA transferase.
Microbial Biosynthesis
Butyrate is produced by several fermentation processes performed by obligate anaerobic bacteria. This fermentation pathway was discovered by Louis Pasteur in 1861. Examples of butyrate-producing species of bacteria include:- Clostridium butyricum
- Clostridium kluyveri
- Clostridium pasteurianum
- Faecalibacterium prausnitzii
- Fusobacterium nucleatum
- Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens
- Eubacterium limosum
Other pathways to butyrate include succinate reduction and crotonate disproportionation.
| Action | Responsible enzyme |
| Acetyl coenzyme A converts into acetoacetyl coenzyme A | acetyl-CoA-acetyl transferase |
| Acetoacetyl coenzyme A converts into β-hydroxybutyryl CoA | β-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase |
| β-hydroxybutyryl CoA converts into crotonyl CoA | crotonase |
| Crotonyl CoA converts into butyryl CoA | butyryl CoA dehydrogenase |
| A phosphate group replaces CoA to form butyryl phosphate | phosphobutyrylase |
| The phosphate group joins ADP to form ATP and butyrate | butyrate kinase |
Several species form acetone and n-butanol in an alternative pathway, which starts as butyrate fermentation. Some of these species are:
- Clostridium acetobutylicum, the most prominent acetone and butanol producer, used also in industry
- Clostridium beijerinckii
- Clostridium tetanomorphum
- Clostridium aurantibutyricum
The change in the pathway occurs after acetoacetyl CoA formation. This intermediate then takes two possible pathways:
- acetoacetyl CoA → acetoacetate → acetone
- acetoacetyl CoA → butyryl CoA → butyraldehyde → butanol
Applications for Commercial Use
For commercial purposes Clostridium species are used preferably for butyric acid or butanol production.Butyric acid that is produced via butyrate fermentation is a common food additive and found within products including butter, milk, cheese, and vegetable oils. Some species within the genus Clostridium are capable of producing biochemicals and biofuels. This fermentation process is able to produce acetone, butanol, and ethanol and is one of the first commercial fermentation processes used for bulk chemical production. This species has also been used in therapy, research, and even cosmetics. It has also been applied to bioprocesses such as in the manufacturing of yogurt, with the most common species used for probiotics being Clostridium butyricum.