首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Ethanol, isopropanol, propanol and butanol enhanced the passive influx of protons into deenergized cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The influx followed first-order kinetics with a rate constant that increased exponentially with the alkanol concentration. The exponential enhancement constants increased with the lipid solubility of the alkanols, which indicated hydrophobic membrane regions as the target sites. While the enhancement constants were independent of pH over the range tested (3.3–5.0), the rate constants decreased linearly with increasing extracellular proton concentration, indicating the presence of an additional surface barrier against proton penetration, the effectiveness of which increased with protonation. The alkanols affected the acidification curves of energized yeast suspensions in such a way that the final pH values were linear functions of the alkanol concentrations. These results were consistent with a balance between active and passive proton movements at the final pH, the exponential enhancement constants calculated from the slopes being nearly identical with those obtained with deenergized cells. It was concluded that passive proton influx contributes to the kinetics of acidification in S. cerevisiae and that uncoupling contributes to the overall kinetics of alkanol-inhibited secondary active transport across the yeast plasma membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Ethanol, isopropanol, propanol and butanol exponentially inhibited the maximum velocity of the glucose transport system ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae, determined by use of the non-metabolizable analogued-xylose. While the exponential inhibition constants increased with the lipid solubility of the alkanols, they were independent of temperature in the range 21°–35°C: the Arrhenius plots (modified according to the theory of absolute reaction rates) of the initial maximum rates of xylose transport were linear and parallel in both the absence and presence of alkanols. Thus, the alkanols did not affect the enthalpy of activation of the glucose transport system (H ± was 12 190 cal mol-1) but decreased the entropy of activation. The following entropy coefficients (decrease in activation entropy per unit concentration of alkanol) were obtained: ethanol,-0.84; isopropanol,-1.21; propanol,-1.41 and butanol,-3.18 entropy units per mole per liter. The temperature relations of glucose fermentation with and without ethanol by resting cells over the temperature range studied (15°–35°C) were nearly identical with those of the glucose transport system, suggesting that the latter mediates the rate-limiting step of the former and that this relationship is maintained in the presence of ethanol.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of acetic acid and extracellular pH (pHex) on the intracellular pH (pHi) of nonfermenting, individual Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells were studied by using a new experimental setup comprising a fluorescence microscope and a perfusion system. S. cerevisiae cells grown in brewer’s wort to the stationary phase were stained with fluorescein diacetate and transferred to a perfusion chamber. The extracellular concentration of undissociated acetic acid at various pHex values was controlled by perfusion with 2 g of total acetic acid per liter at pHex 3.5, 4.5, 5.6, and 6.5 through the chamber by using a high-precision pump. The pHi of individual S. cerevisiae cells during perfusion was measured by fluorescence microscopy and ratio imaging. Potential artifacts, such as fading and efflux of fluorescein, could be neglected within the experimental time used. At pHex 6.5, the pHi of individual S. cerevisiae cells decreased as the extracellular concentration of undissociated acetic acid increased from 0 to 0.035 g/liter, whereas at pHex 3.5, 4.5, and 5.6, the pHi of individual S. cerevisiae cells decreased as the extracellular concentration of undissociated acetic acid increased from 0 to 0.10 g/liter. At concentrations of undissociated acetic acid of more than 0.10 g/liter, the pHi remained constant. The decreases in pHi were dependent on the pHex; i.e., the decreases in pHi at pHex 5.6 and 6.5 were significantly smaller than the decreases in pHi at pHex 3.5 and 4.5.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Maltose transport in S. cerevisiae was inhibited by ethanol and other alkanols in a non-competitive way. The Michaelis constant, Km, for the sugar, with or without alkanols was 5.9 mM, whereas the maximum trans port capacity, Vmax, decreased exponentially with alkanols concentration. The inhibitory capacity was positively correlated with the lipid solubility of the alkanols, indicating that inhibition is due to an alteration of the lipid environment of the maltose transport system in the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

5.
The motility of Clostridium acetobutylicum has been investigated during a typical batch fermentation process for solvent production. The motility is characterized by “runs” during the early phase of sugar utilization and acid production, but this changes to “tumbles” during the onset of solventogenesis. Sugars and undissociated acetic and butyric acids have been shown to be attractants for the bacterium, while acetone, butanol, ethanol, and dissociated acetate and butyrate are repellents. It is suggested that chemotactic responses explain why highly motile cells are strongly solventogenic.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the intracellular physiological conditions associated with the induction of butanol-producing enzymes in Clostridium acetobutylicum. During the acidogenic phase of growth, the internal pH decreased in parallel with the decrease in the external pH, but the internal pH did not go below 5.5 throughout batch growth. Butanol was found to dissipate the proton motive force of fermenting C. acetobutylicum cells by decreasing the transmembrane pH gradient, whereas the membrane potential was affected only slightly. In growing cells, the switch from acid to solvent production occurred when the internal undissociated butyric acid concentration reached 13 mM and the total intracellular undissociated acid concentration (acetic plus butyric acids) was at least 40 to 45 mM. Similar values were obtained when cultures were supplemented with 50 mM butyric acid initially or when a phosphate-buffered medium was used instead of an acetate-buffered medium. To measure the induction of the enzymes involved in solvent synthesis, we determined the rates of conversion of butyrate to butanol in growing cells. The rate of butanol formation reached a maximum in the mid-solvent phase, when the butanol concentration was 50 mM. Although more solvent accumulated later, de novo enzyme synthesis decreased and then ceased.  相似文献   

7.
Ethanol, isopropanol, propanol, and butanol enhanced thermal death in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by increasing DeltaSdouble dagger, the entropy of activation of thermal death while DeltaHdouble dagger, the enthalpy of activation, was not significantly affected. The relation between DeltaSdouble dagger and alkanol concentration was linear with a different slope for each alkanol: DeltaS(double dagger) (X) = DeltaS(double dagger) (0) + C(A) (E)X, where X is the alkanol concentration and C(A) (E) the entropy coefficient for the aqueous phase defined as increase in entropy of activation per unit concentrations of the alkanol. C(A) (E) was correlated with the lipid-buffer partition coefficients of the alkanols while C(M) (E), the entropy coefficient for the lipid phase, was nearly identical for the four alkanol and averaged 37.6 entropy units per mole of alkanol per kilogram of membrane. As predicted by these results, the specific death rates (K(d)) at constant temperature were an exponential function of the alkanol concentration and behaved in agreement with the following equation: In K(X) (d) = In K(0) (d) + (C(A) (E)/R)X, where R is the gas constant. It was concluded that the alkanols enhanced thermal death through nonspecific action on membrane structure.  相似文献   

8.
The production of acetic acid by Clostridium thermoaceticum was studied by using batch fermentations. In a pH-controlled fermentation with sodium hydroxide (pH 6.9), this organism was able to produce 56 g of acetic acid per liter. On the other hand, when the pH was not controlled and was decreased during fermentation to 5.4, the maximum attainable acetic acid concentration was only 15.3 g/liter. To obtain a better understanding of the end product inhibition, various salts were tested to determine their effect on the growth rate of C. thermoaceticum. An inverse linear relationship between the growth rate and the final cell concentration to the sodium acetate concentration was found. By using different concentrations of externally added sodium salts, the relative growth inhibition caused by the anion was found to be in the order of acetate > chloride > sulfate. Various externally added cations of acetate were also examined with respect to their inhibitory effects on growth. The relative magnitude of inhibition on the growth rate was found to be ammonium > potassium > sodium. The combined results have shown that the undissociated acetic acid was much more inhibitory than the ionized acetate ion. Complete growth inhibition resulted when the undissociated acetic acid concentration was between 0.04 and 0.05 M and when the ionized acetate concentration was 0.8 M. Therefore, at low pH (below 6.0), undissociated acetic acid is responsible for growth inhibition, and at high pH (above 6.0), ionized acetate ion is responsible for growth inhibition.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The internal pH of Saccharomyces cerevisiae IGC 3507 III (a respiratory-deficient mutant) was measured by the distribution of [14C]propionic acid, when the yeast was fermenting glucose at pH 3.5, 4.5 and 5.5 in the presence of several concentrations of acetic acid and ethanol. Good correlation was obtained between fermentation rates and internal pH. For all external pH values tested, the internal pH was 7.0–7.2 in the absence of inhibitors. The addition of acetic acid and/or ethanol resulted in a decrease of fermentation rate together with a drop in internal pH. Internal pH did not depend on the concentration of total external acetic acid but only on the concentration of the undissociated form of the acid. Ethanol potentiated the effect of acetic acid both with respect to inhibition of fermentation and internal acidification.  相似文献   

10.
Cells of Zygosaccharomyces bailii ISA 1307 grown in a medium with acetic acid, ethanol, or glycerol as the sole carbon and energy source transported acetic acid by a saturable transport system. This system accepted propionic and formic acids but not lactic, sorbic, and benzoic acids. When the carbon source was glucose or fructose, the cells displayed activity of a mediated transport system specific for acetic acid, apparently not being able to recognize other monocarboxylic acids. In both types of cells, ethanol inhibited the transport of labelled acetic acid. The inhibition was noncompetitive, and the dependence of the maximum transport rate on the ethanol concentration was found to be exponential. These results reinforced the belief that, under the referenced growth conditions, the acid entered the cells mainly through a transporter protein. The simple diffusion of the undissociated acid appeared to contribute, with a relatively low weight, to the overall acid uptake. It was concluded that in Z. bailii, ethanol plays a protective role against the possible negative effects of acetic acid by inhibiting its transport and accumulation. Thus, the intracellular concentration of the acid could be maintained at levels lower than those expected if the acid entered the cells only by simple diffusion.  相似文献   

11.
Inhibition of the fermentation of acetate to methane and carbon dioxide by acetate was analyzed with an acetate-acclimatized sludge and with Methanosarcina barkeri Fusaro under mesophilic conditions. A second-order substrate inhibition model, q(ch(4) ) = q(m)S/[K(s) + S + (S/K(i))], where S was the concentration of undissociated acetic acid, not ionized acetic acid, could be applicable in both cases. The analysis resulted in substrate saturation constants, K(s), of 4.0 muM for the acclimatized sludge and 104 muM for M. barkeri. The threshold concentrations of undissociated acetic acid when no further acetate utilization was observed were 0.078 muM (pH 7.50) for the acclimatized sludge and 4.43 muM (pH 7.45) for M. barkeri. These kinetic results suggested that the concentration of undissociated acetic acid became a key factor governing the actual threshold acetate concentration for acetate utilization and that the acclimatized sludge in which Methanothrix spp. appeared dominant could utilize acetate better and survive at a lower concentration of undissociated acetic acid than could M. barkeri.  相似文献   

12.
Acetic acid (167 mM) and lactic acid (548 mM) completely inhibited growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae both in minimal medium and in media which contained supplements, such as yeast extract, corn steep powder, or a mixture of amino acids. However, the yeast grew when the pH of the medium containing acetic acid or lactic acid was adjusted to 4.5, even though the medium still contained the undissociated form of either acid at a concentration of 102 mM. The results indicated that the buffer pair formed when the pH was adjusted to 4.5 stabilized the pH of the medium by sequestering protons and by lessening the negative impact of the pH drop on yeast growth, and it also decreased the difference between the extracellular and intracellular pH values (ΔpH), the driving force for the intracellular accumulation of acid. Increasing the undissociated acetic acid concentration at pH 4.5 to 163 mM by raising the concentration of the total acid to 267 mM did not increase inhibition. It is suggested that this may be the direct result of decreased acidification of the cytosol because of the intracellular buffering by the buffer pair formed from the acid already accumulated. At a concentration of 102 mM undissociated acetic acid, the yeast grew to higher cell density at pH 3.0 than at pH 4.5, suggesting that it is the total concentration of acetic acid (104 mM at pH 3.0 and 167 mM at pH 4.5) that determines the extent of growth inhibition, not the concentration of undissociated acid alone.  相似文献   

13.
Paenibacillus polymyxa ATCC 12321 produced more acetic acid and less butanediol from xylose than from glucose. The product yields from xylose were ethanol (0.72 mol/mol sugar), (R,R)-2,3-butanediol (0.31 mol/mol sugar), and acetate (0.38 mol/mol sugar) while those from glucose were ethanol (0.74 mol/mol sugar), (R,R)-2,3-butanediol (0.46 mol/mol sugar), and acetate (0.05 mol/mol sugar). Higher acetate kinase activity and lower acetate uptake ability were found in xylose-grown cells than in glucose-grown cells. Furthermore, phosphoketolase activity was higher in xylose-grown cells than in glucose-grown cells. In fed-batch culture on xylose, glucose feeding raised the butanediol yield to 0.56 mol/mol sugar and reduced acetate accumulation to 0.04 mol/mol sugar.  相似文献   

14.
The carbohydrate metabolism ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae is strongly influenced by the concentration and the nature of the carbon source. As long as glucose is present in the growth medium, the cells possess a predominantly glycolytic pathway of degradation and low levels of α-glucosidase and of those enzymes of the citric-acid cycle, the respiratory chain, and the glyoxylate cycle, which are localized in the mitochondria. After the depletion of glucose the level of these enzymes rises considerably. As long as the carbon source can be demonstrated in the medium, maltose-grown cells have a greater oxidative activity and a higher level of these enzymes than glucose-grown cells, unlike glucose-grown cells they easily adapt to ethanol and acetate. Catabolite repression is suggested as an important factor in the regulation of synthesis of enzymes of the citric-acid cycle, the glyoxylate cycle and the respiratory chain. There is an obvious correlation between the regulation of α-glucosidase and of the enzymes of oxidative carbohydrate metabolism.  相似文献   

15.
The pH of continuous cultures of Clostridium acetobutylicum growing at pH 5.6 was allowed to decrease to 4.3 after acid production and thereby to shift the cultures from acetate and butyrate to acetone and butanol formation. Several parameters were determined during the shift. An increase in the intracellular acid concentration to 440 mM was recorded. An excess of undissociated butyric acid but not of acetic acid just before the shift to solventogenesis was followed by a decline in acid production and subsequently by the uptake of acids. The intracellular ATP concentration reached a minimum before the onset of solventogenesis; this presumably reflects the ATP-consuming proton extrusion connected with the increase in the ΔpH from 0.7 to 1.4 units. The pool of NADH plus NADPH exhibited a drastic increase until solventogenesis was induced. The changes in the ATP and ADP and NADH plus NADPH pools during these pH shift experiments were the beginning of a stable metabolic oscillation which could also be recorded as an oscillation of the culture redox potential under steady-state solventogenic conditions. Similar changes were observed when the shift was induced by the addition of butyrate and acetate (50 mM each) to the continuous culture. However, when methyl viologen was added, important differences were found: ATP levels did not reach a minimum, acetoacetate decarboxylase activity could not be measured, and butanol but not acetone was produced. A model for the shift is proposed; it assumes the generation of two signals, one by the changed ATP and ADP levels and the other by the increased NAD(P)H level.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of perfusion with 2.7 and 26 mM undissociated acetic acid in the absence or presence of glucose on short-term intracellular pH (pH(i)) changes in individual Saccharormyces cerevisiae and Zygosaccharomyces bailii cells were studied using fluorescence-ratio-imaging microscopy and a perfusion system. In the S. cerevisiae cells, perfusion with acetic acid induced strong short-term pH(i) responses, which were dependent on the undissociated acetic acid concentration and the presence of glucose in the perfusion solutions. In the Z. bailii cells, perfusion with acetic acid induced only very weak short-term pH(i) responses, which were neither dependent on the undissociated acetic acid concentration nor on the presence of glucose in the perfusion solutions. These results clearly show that Z. bailii is more resistant than S. cerevisiae to short-term pH(i) changes caused by acetic acid.  相似文献   

17.
Toxic concentrations of monocarboxylic weak acids present in lignocellulosic hydrolyzates affect cell integrity and fermentative performance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In this work, we report the deletion of the general catabolite repressor Mig1p as a strategy to improve the tolerance of S. cerevisiae towards inhibitory concentrations of acetic, formic or levulinic acid. In contrast with the wt yeast, where the growth and ethanol production were ceased in presence of acetic acid 5 g/L or formic acid 1.75 g/L (initial pH not adjusted), the m9 strain (Δmig1::kan) produced 4.06?±?0.14 and 3.87?±?0.06 g/L of ethanol, respectively. Also, m9 strain tolerated a higher concentration of 12.5 g/L acetic acid (initial pH adjusted to 4.5) without affecting its fermentative performance. Moreover, m9 strain produced 33% less acetic acid and 50–70% less glycerol in presence of weak acids, and consumed acetate and formate as carbon sources under aerobic conditions. Our results show that the deletion of Mig1p provides a single gene deletion target for improving the acid tolerance of yeast strains significantly.  相似文献   

18.
Cellular responses of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to high temperatures of up to 42 °C during ethanol fermentation at a high glucose concentration (i.e., 100 g/L) were investigated. Increased temperature correlated with stimulated glucose uptake to produce not only the thermal protectant glycerol but also ethanol and acetic acid. Carbon flux into the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle correlated positively with cultivation temperature. These results indicate that the increased demand for energy (in the form of ATP), most likely caused by multiple stressors, including heat, acetic acid, and ethanol, was matched by both the fermentation and respiration pathways. Notably, acetic acid production was substantially stimulated compared to that of other metabolites during growth at increased temperature. The acetic acid produced in addition to ethanol seemed to subsequently result in adverse effects, leading to increased production of reactive oxygen species. This, in turn, appeared to cause the specific growth rate, and glucose uptake rate reduced leading to a decrease of the specific ethanol production rate far before glucose depletion. These results suggest that adverse effects from heat, acetic acid, ethanol, and oxidative stressors are synergistic, resulting in a decrease of the specific growth rate and ethanol production rate and, hence, are major determinants of cell stability and ethanol fermentation performance of S. cerevisiae at high temperatures. The results are discussed in the context of possible applications.  相似文献   

19.
Acetic acid induces unique physiological responses in mammalian cells. Our previous study found that fura-2-loaded human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293T cells showed a robust intracellular fluorescence response immediately after stimulation with acetic acid, and no such response in the case of citric acid. In the present study, we aimed to identify the unique characteristics of acetic acid responsible for this phenomenon. We found that one such feature is its hydrophobicity. We also discovered that acetic acid induces cell responses by intracellular acidification. Of the components of acetic acid in solution (protons, acetate ions, and undissociated acetic acid), undissociated acetic acid might be the functional unit that penetrates the lipid bilayer of cell membranes to acidify the intracellular environment, thereby inducing cell responses. The method used in this study might be convenient in evaluating the intracellular acidification of cultured cells by acids in the external environment.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract Ethanol and acetic acid, at concentrations which may occur during wine-making, inhibited the transport of l-malic acid in Schizosaccharomyces pombe . The inhibition was non-competitive, the decrease of the maximum initial velocity following exponential kinetics. Glucose transport was not significantly affected either by ethanol (up to 13%, w/v) or by acetic acid (up to 1.5%, w/v). The uptake of labelled acetic acid followed simple diffusion kinetics, indicating that a carrier was not involved in its transport. Therefore, the undissociated acid appears to be the only form that enters the cells and is probably responsible for the toxic effects. Accordingly, deacidification by Ss. pombe during wine fermentation should take place before, rather than after, the main alcoholic fermentation by Saccharomyces cerevisiae .  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号