This study provides detailed analysis of the lignocellulolytic activity of a
new isolate Stereum gausapatum F28, Serbian autochthonous fungi, on
beechwood sawdust supplemented with cheap waste, sugar beet molasses
stillage. Advanced multiple response optimization techniques were applied to
improve ligninolytic and reduce hydrolytic activity as a requirement for
potential biorefinery use. The applied techniques were supposed to select
cultivation conditions that would give manganese peroxidase and laccase
activities above 0.84 and 0.12 U g-1 substrate, respectively, and cellulase
and xylanase activities below 1.12 and 1.4 U g-1 substrate. The optimal
cultivation conditions that met the set requirements included molasses
stillage concentration of 10 %, substrate moisture content of 53 %,
incubation temperature of 23.5?C, and pH 5.2. The research showed that the
addition of molasses stillage had positive effect on the enzyme production
and that the optimal stillage concentration differed depending on the enzyme
type (for laccase it was <5 %, manganese peroxidase ~12 %, cellulase ~21 %,
xylanase ~16 %), which should be taken into consideration when optimizing
the desired process.