“…Moreover, in several of the tested microorganisms (i.e., strains C. curvatus NRRL Y-1511, R. toruloides NRRL Y-27012, R. toruloides DSM 4444, L. starkeyi DSM 70296), appreciable Y IPS/X quantities (i.e., ≥ 35% w/w) have been reported even at the very early growth steps (i.e., in fermentation time, t ≤ 60 h) where assimilable nitrogen was found into the medium-or it had barely been exhausted, in accordance with results in which other low-molecular weight hydrophilic carbon sources had been used as substrates under nitrogen-limited conditions (i.e., crude sucrose, lactose, biodiesel-derived glycerol, etc. ; see: [33,40,47]). In contrast, in other yeast strains reported in the literature (yeast species/genera like Apiotrichum curvatum, Yarrowia lipolytica, other R. toruloides strains, Metschnikowia sp.)…”