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1.
The nature of the endogenous reserves of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was examined with respect to conditions of growth, specifically extremes of oxygen tension and carbon source. Cells were grown in batch culture at 30 C under aerobic conditions on a galactose or glucose carbon source and under anaerobic conditions on glucose. The greatest effect of growth conditions on the chemical composition of the cells was on their fatty acid and sterol content.Cells grown under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions mobilised concurrently protein, glycogen, trehalose and fatty acids during a period of 72 hours' starvation under aerobic conditions. The viability of both types of the aerobically grown cells declined to 75% during this period and was not influenced by the initial fatty acid and sterol content of the cells. Cells grown anaerobically showed a more rapid decline in viability which was only 17% after 72 hours' starvation. This loss of viability was not due to a lack of available endogenous reserves but was probably due to an impaired membrane function caused by a deficiency of sterols and unsaturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

2.
In this study, we compared the growth properties and molecular characteristics of pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) among highly acetic acid-resistant strains of acetic acid bacteria. Ga. europaeus exhibited the highest resistance to acetic acid (10%), whereas Ga. intermedius and Acetobacter pasteurianus resisted up to 6% of acetic acid. In media with different concentrations of acetic acid, the maximal acetic acid production rate of Ga. europaeus slowly increased, but specific growth rates decreased concomitant with increased concentration of acetic acid in medium. The lag phase of A. pasteurianus was twice and four times longer in comparison to the lag phases of Ga. europaeus and Ga. intermedius, respectively. PQQ-dependent ADH activity was twice as high in Ga. europaeus and Ga. intermedius as in A. pasteurinus. The purified enzymes showed almost the same specific activity to each other, but in the presence of acetic acid, the enzyme activity decreased faster in A. pasteurianus and Ga. intermedius than in Ga. europaeus. These results suggest that high ADH activity in the Ga. europaeus cells and high acetic acid stability of the purified enzyme represent two of the unique features that enable this species to grow and stay metabolically active at extremely high concentrations of acetic acid.  相似文献   

3.
Summary In a strain ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae, acetic acid at concentrations up to 1% (v/v) depressed the tolerance to added ethanol, from 11% (v/v) down to zero, and simultaneously narrowed the temperature range of growth from 3–42°C to 19–26°C. In addition, acetic acid shifted the associative temperature profile of growthand death to lower temperatures, and depressed the growth yield on glucose.  相似文献   

4.
Lignocellulosic raw material plays a crucial role in the development of sustainable processes for the production of fuels and chemicals. Weak acids such as acetic acid and formic acid are troublesome inhibitors restricting efficient microbial conversion of the biomass to desired products. To improve our understanding of weak acid inhibition and to identify engineering strategies to reduce acetic acid toxicity, the highly acetic‐acid‐tolerant yeast Zygosaccharomyces bailii was studied. The impact of acetic acid membrane permeability on acetic acid tolerance in Z. bailii was investigated with particular focus on how the previously demonstrated high sphingolipid content in the plasma membrane influences acetic acid tolerance and membrane permeability. Through molecular dynamics simulations, we concluded that membranes with a high content of sphingolipids are thicker and more dense, increasing the free energy barrier for the permeation of acetic acid through the membrane. Z. bailii cultured with the drug myriocin, known to decrease cellular sphingo­lipid levels, exhibited significant growth inhibition in the presence of acetic acid, while growth in medium without acetic acid was unaffected by the myriocin addition. Furthermore, following an acetic acid pulse, the intracellular pH decreased more in myriocin‐treated cells than in control cells. This indicates a higher inflow rate of acetic acid and confirms that the reduction in growth of cells cultured with myriocin in the medium with acetic acid was due to an increase in membrane permeability, thereby demonstrating the importance of a high fraction of sphingolipids in the membrane of Z. bailii to facilitate acetic acid resistance; a property potentially transferable to desired production organisms suffering from weak acid stress. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2016;113: 744–753. © 2015 The Authors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Fourteen wild-type baking strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were grown in batch culture to true stationary phase (exogenous carbon source exhausted) and tested for their trehalose content and their tolerance to heat (52°C for 4.5 min), ethanol (20% v/v for 30 min), H2O2 (0.3 M for 60 min), rapid freezing (−196°C for 20 min, cooling rate 200°C min−1), slow freezing (−20°C for 24 h, cooling rate 3°C min−1), salt (growth in 1.5 M NaCl agar) or acetic acid (growth in 0.4% w/v acetic acid agar) stresses. Stress tolerance among the strains was highly variable and up to 1000-fold differences existed between strains for some types of stress. Compared with previously published reports, all strains were tolerant to H2O2 stress. Correlation analysis of stress tolerance results demonstrated relationships between tolerance to H2O2 and tolerance to all stresses except ethanol. This may imply that oxidative processes are associated with a wide variety of cellular stresses and also indicate that the general robustness associated with industrial yeast may be a result of their oxidative stress tolerance. In addition, H2O2 tolerance might be a suitable marker for the general assessment of stress tolerance in yeast strains. Trehalose content failed to correlate with tolerance to any stress except acetic acid. This may indicate that the contribution of trehalose to tolerance to other stresses is either small or inconsistent and that trehalose may not be used as a general predictor of stress tolerance in true stationary phase yeast. Received 10 October 1995/ Accepted in revised form 10 September 1996  相似文献   

6.
Acetic acid existing in a culture medium is one of the most limiting constraints in yeast growth and viability during ethanol fermentation. To improve acetic acid tolerance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains, a drug resistance marker-aided genome shuffling approach with higher screen efficiency of shuffled mutants was developed in this work. Through two rounds of genome shuffling of ultraviolet mutants derived from the original strain 308, we obtained a shuffled strain YZ2, which shows significantly faster growth and higher cell viability under acetic acid stress. Ethanol production of YZ2 (within 60 h) was 21.6% higher than that of 308 when 0.5% (v/v) acetic acid was added to fermentation medium. Membrane integrity, higher in vivo activity of the H+-ATPase, and lower oxidative damage after acetic acid treatment are the possible reasons for the acetic acid-tolerance phenotype of YZ2. These results indicated that this novel genome shuffling approach is powerful to rapidly improve the complex traits of industrial yeast strains.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Specific growth rates (μ) of two strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae decreased exponentially (R 2>0.9) as the concentrations of acetic acid or lactic acid were increased in minimal media at 30°C. Moreover, the length of the lag phase of each growth curve (h) increased exponentially as increasing concentrations of acetic or lactic acid were added to the media. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of acetic acid for yeast growth was 0.6% w/v (100 mM) and that of lactic acid was 2.5% w/v (278 mM) for both strains of yeast. However, acetic acid at concentrations as low as 0.05–0.1% w/v and lactic acid at concentrations of 0.2–0.8% w/v begin to stress the yeasts as seen by reduced growth rates and decreased rates of glucose consumption and ethanol production as the concentration of acetic or lactic acid in the media was raised. In the presence of increasing acetic acid, all the glucose in the medium was eventually consumed even though the rates of consumption differed. However, this was not observed in the presence of increasing lactic acid where glucose consumption was extremely protracted even at a concentration of 0.6% w/v (66 mM). A response surface central composite design was used to evaluate the interaction between acetic and lactic acids on the specific growth rate of both yeast strains at 30C. The data were analysed using the General Linear Models (GLM) procedure. From the analysis, the interaction between acetic acid and lactic acid was statistically significant (P≤0.001), i.e., the inhibitory effect of the two acids present together in a medium is highly synergistic. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2001) 26, 171–177. Received 06 June 2000/ Accepted in revised form 21 September 2000  相似文献   

9.
The effect of acetic acid on the growth and the fermentative activity of S. cerevisiae was analysed comparatively with the pH. This study showed that the pH does not affect these two activities. On the contrary, the acetic acid has an inhibition effect. This effect was modelised by the relation of Levenspiel. Finally, it was shown that the quantities of acetic acid produced by Brettanomyces were not sufficient to explain the inhibition of Saccharomyces.  相似文献   

10.
Succinic acid-producing Anaerobiospirillum succiniciproducens was anaerobically grown in a glycerol-fed continuous bioreactor in order to investigate the physiological responses of the cell to different pH values (5.9, 6.2, or 6.5) and various dilution rates, D. In these experiments, A. succiniciproducens showed a pH-dependent glycerol consumption behavior. When pH was maintained at 5.9 or 6.5, glycerol started to accumulate even at a very low D of 0.027 h−1. Succinic acid yield was not significantly affected by the pH of the culture or the Ds. However, more acetic acid formation was observed when the growth rate of A. succiniciproducens was fast on glycerol at pH 6.2 (at D ≥ 0.15 h−1). The highest obtainable succinic acid/acetic acid ratio was 40:1, which was 10 times higher than that obtained by batch cultures grown on glucose. The maximum obtainable productivity of succinic acid was 2.1 g L−1 h−1), which was 14 times higher than that obtained by batch culture.  相似文献   

11.
12.
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   

13.
Mixed culture of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Acetobacter pasteurianus was carried out for high yield of acetic acid. Acetic acid production process was divided into three stages. The first stage was the growth of S. cerevisiae and ethanol production, fermentation temperature and aeration rate were controlled at 32 °C and 0.2 vvm, respectively. The second stage was the co-culture of S. cerevisiae and A. pasteurianus, fermentation temperature and aeration rate were maintained at 34 °C and 0.4 vvm, respectively. The third stage was the growth of A. pasteurianus and production of acetic acid, fermentation temperature and aeration rate were controlled at 32 °C and 0.2 vvm, respectively. Inoculation volume of A. pasteurianus and S. cerevisiae was 16% and 0.06%, respectively. The average acetic acid concentration was 52.51 g/L under these optimum conditions. To enhance acetic acid production, a glucose feeding strategy was subsequently employed. When initial glucose concentration was 90 g/L and 120 g/L glucose was fed twice during fermentation, acetic acid concentration reached 66.0 g/L.  相似文献   

14.
The cryotolerance in frozen doughs and in water suspensions of bakers' yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) previously grown under various industrial conditions was evaluated on a laboratory scale. Fed-batch cultures were very superior to batch cultures, and strong aeration enhanced cryoresistance in both cases for freezing rates of 1 to 56°C min−1. Loss of cell viability in frozen dough or water was related to the duration of the dissolved-oxygen deficit during fed-batch growth. Strongly aerobic fed-batch cultures grown at a reduced average specific rate (μ = 0.088 h−1 compared with 0.117 h−1) also showed greater trehalose synthesis and improved frozen-dough stability. Insufficient aeration (dissolved-oxygen deficit) and lower growth temperature (20°C instead of 30°C) decreased both fed-batch-grown yeast cryoresistance and trehalose content. Although trehalose had a cryoprotective effect in S. cerevisiae, its effect was neutralized by even a momentary lack of excess dissolved oxygen in the fed-batch growth medium.  相似文献   

15.
In mammals, extended periods of fasting leads to the accumulation of blood ketone bodies including acetoacetate. Here we show that similar to the conversion of leucine to acetoacetate in fasting mammals, starvation conditions induced ketone body‐like acetic acid generation from leucine in S. cerevisiae. Whereas wild‐type and ras2Δ cells accumulated acetic acid, long‐lived tor1Δ and sch9Δ mutants rapidly depleted it through a mitochondrial acetate CoA transferase‐dependent mechanism, which was essential for lifespan extension. The sch9Δ‐dependent utilization of acetic acid also required coenzyme Q biosynthetic genes and promoted the accumulation of intracellular trehalose. These results indicate that Tor‐Sch9 deficiency extends longevity by switching cells to an alternative metabolic mode, in which acetic acid can be utilized for the storage of stress resistance carbon sources. These effects are reminiscent of those described for ketone bodies in fasting mammals and raise the possibility that the lifespan extension caused by Tor‐S6K inhibition may also involve analogous metabolic changes in higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

16.
Lignocellulosic biomass has considerable potential for the production of fuels and chemicals as a promising alternative to conventional fossil fuels. However, the bioconversion of lignocellulosic biomass to desired products must be improved to reach economic viability. One of the main technical hurdles is the presence of inhibitors in biomass hydrolysates, which hampers the bioconversion efficiency by biorefinery microbial platforms such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae in terms of both production yields and rates. In particular, acetic acid, a major inhibitor derived from lignocellulosic biomass, severely restrains the performance of engineered xylose‐utilizing S. cerevisiae strains, resulting in decreased cell growth, xylose utilization rate, and product yield. In this study, the robustness of XUSE, one of the best xylose‐utilizing strains, was improved for the efficient conversion of lignocellulosic biomass into bioethanol under the inhibitory condition of acetic acid stress. Through adaptive laboratory evolution, we successfully developed the evolved strain XUSAE57, which efficiently converted xylose to ethanol with high yields of 0.43–0.50 g ethanol/g xylose even under 2–5 g/L of acetic stress. XUSAE57 not only achieved twofold higher ethanol yields but also improved the xylose utilization rate by more than twofold compared to those of XUSE in the presence of 4 g/L of acetic acid. During fermentation of lignocellulosic hydrolysate, XUSAE57 simultaneously converted glucose and xylose with the highest ethanol yield reported to date (0.49 g ethanol/g sugars). This study demonstrates that the bioconversion of lignocellulosic biomass by an engineered strain could be significantly improved through adaptive laboratory evolution for acetate tolerance, which could help realize the development of an economically feasible lignocellulosic biorefinery to produce fuels and chemicals.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Both added (49.6 g/l) and produced ethanol (46.2 g/l) caused an increase in the acetic acid tolerance of Saccharomyces cerevisiaegrown in an anaerobic chemostat; added ethanol, however, to a less extent than produced ethanol. The ethanol induced acetic acid tolerance of the cells was linked with an accumulation of trehalose within the cells. These results indicate that trehalose plays a role in the ethanol induced acetic acid tolerance of S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

19.
Effect of acetic acid on astaxanthin production by Phaffia rhodozyma   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Summary Low concentrations of acetic acid decreased the growth rate of and astaxanthin production by Phaffia rhodozyma on glucose, with growth completely inhibited by 2 g acetic acid/l. Using H2SO4 for pH control after sugar depletion caused a decline in the biomass concentration, whereas using acetic acid as titrant resulted in an increase in the biomass with a high astaxanthin content of 1430 g/g cells. An extended culture with a continuous glucose feed failed to maintain a high astaxanthin content.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The effect of pH and acetic acid on growth and 2,3-butanediol production of Enterobacter aerogenes from glucose was investigated in a microaerobic continuous culture. At a dilution rate of 0.20 h–1 and a fixed oxygen uptake rate (OUR) of 31.5 mmol l–1 h–1 the biomass concentration increased with pH ranging from 5.0 to 7.0, while the specific ATP requirement of the cells decreased. In the pH range 5.5–6.5 the product concentration (butanediol + acetoin) was maximal and nearly constant. However, the specific production continuously declined with increasing pH. Experiments with addition of acetic acid showed that the various effects of pH are due to inhibition of the by-product acetic acid on cell growth. The strength of the acetic and inhibition depended only on the concentration of its undissociated form [HAc]. The biomass concentration and the specific OUR were also only functions of [HAc], irrespective of the pH. Although the specific ATP requirement (q ATP) strongly depended on the pH, [HAc] at constant pH. Offprint requests to: W.-D. Deckwer  相似文献   

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