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1.
Astaxanthin production by a Phaffia rhodozyma mutant on grape juice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
During fermenter cultivation of Phaffia rhodozyma on a grape juice medium, the presence of glucose initially delayed fructose utilization, although fructose was consumed before glucose depletion. Total pigment and astaxanthin production were growth associated and reached maximum values of 15.9 g/ml and 9.8 g/ml, respectively, after depletion of the carbon source. The total cellular pigment and astaxanthin content increased during the stationary growth phase due to a decrease in biomass, reaching final values of 2120 g/g and 1350 g/g, respectively, without the volumetric concentration in the culture changing. The final cell yield was 0.33 g/g sugar utilized. High sugar concentrations in shake-flasks as well as O2 limitation decreased the astaxanthin content of the cells. Addition of yeast extract to a grape juice minimal medium markedly increased the maximum specific growth rate, total pigment and astaxanthin content of the cells. An excess of ammonia decreased the intracellular astaxanthin content, which reached a maximal value in cultures with no residual glucose or ammonia.The authors are with the Department of Microbiology and Biochemistry, University of the Orange Free State, P.O. Box 339, Bloemfontein 9300, South Africa;  相似文献   

2.
Mutagenesis of Phaffia rhodozyma with NTG yielded a mutant with an astaxanthin content of 1688 g (g dry biomass)-1, a cell yield coefficient of 0.47 on glucose and a maximum specific growth rate of 0.12 h-1. Re-mutation of the mutant decreased the cell yield and maximum specific growth rate but increased the astaxanthin content. The use of mannitol or succinate as carbon sources enhanced pigmentation, yielding astaxanthin contents of 1973 g g-1 and 1926 g g-1, respectively. The use of valine as sole nitrogen source also increased astaxanthin production, but severely decreased the maximum specific growth rate and cell yield coefficient. The optimum pH for growth of P. rhodozyma was between pH 4.5 and 5.5, whereas the astaxanthin content remained constant above pH 3.  相似文献   

3.
The growth of Clostridium populeti in 2% (w/v) glucose medium containing 0.2% (w/v) yeast extract was optimal with 10 mM NH4Cl as the nitrogen source. Although the maximum specific growth rate (=0.32 h-1) with 5 mM NH4Cl was similar, the biomass yield was about 30% lower than that at the optimum. Either sodium sulphide or cysteine-HCl at an optimum concentration of 0.33 mM and 5.0 mM respectively, could serve as the sole sulphur source for growth. The growth rate was unaffected by initial glucose concentrations of up to 10% (w/v), but in the presence of 15% glucose it declined by about 35%. The molar yield of butyric acid (mol/mol glucose) declined from 0.70 in 1% (w/v) initial glucose medium to 0.39 in 10% glucose medium. In 5.7% initial glucose medium, butyric acid levels of 6.3 g/l were obtained (0.56 mol butyrate/mol glucose) after 72 h of incubation in 2.5 l batch cultures. A decrease of about 50% in the maximum specific growth rate of C. populeti was observed in the presence of an initial concentration of either 1.2 g/l of butyric acid or 18.9 g/l of acetic acid.This paper is issued as NRCC No. 29032  相似文献   

4.
陈涛  向文洲  何慧  陈峰 《微生物学报》2007,34(5):0856-0858
研究了葡萄糖、蔗糖和果糖对小球藻(Chlorella zofingiensis)异养生长及产虾青素的影响,结果表明,在糖浓度为20g/L时,细胞生长较快,但干重较小,虾青素含量较低;在糖浓度为50g/L时,细胞生长较慢,但干重较大,虾青素含量较高。3种碳源中蔗糖和葡萄糖效果较好,在蔗糖浓度为50g/L时,虾青素含量和产量分别达到0.94 mg/g和9.61 mg/L。  相似文献   

5.
Summary The recent models of the Acetone-Butanol fermentation did not adequately describe the culture inhibition by the accumulating metabolites and were unable to simulate the acidogenic culture dynamics at elevated pH levels. The present updated modification of the model features a generalised inhibition term and a pH dependent terms for intracellular conversion of undissociated acids into solvent products. The culture dynamics predictions by the developed model compared well with experimental results from an unconventional acidogenic fermentation ofC. acetobutylicum.Nomenclature A acetone concentration in the fermentation broth, [g/L] - AA total concentration of dissociated and undissociated acetic acid, [g/L] - AA undiss concentration of undissociated acetic acid, [g/L] - APS Absolute Parameter Sensitivity - AT acetoin concentration in the fermentation broth, [g/L] - B butanol concentration in the fermentation broth, [g/L] - BA total concentration of dissociated and undissociated butyric acid, [g/L] - BA undiss concentration of undissociated butyric acid, [g/L] - E ethanol concentration in the fermentation broth, [g/L] - f(T) inhibition function as defined in Equation (2) - k 1 constant in Equation (4), [g substrate/g biomass] - k 2 constant in Equation (4), [g substrate/(g biomass.h)] - k 1 constant in Equation (5), [g substrate/(g biomass] - k 2 constant in Equation (5), [g substrate/(g biomass.h)] - k 3 constant in Equation (6), [g butyric acid/g substrate] - k 4 constant in Equation (6), [g butyric acid/(g biomass.h)] - k 5 constant in Equation (7), [g butanol/g substrate] - k 6 constant in Equation (8), [g acetic acid/g substrate] - k 7 constant in Equation (8), [g acetic acid/(g biomass.h)] - k 8 constant in Equation (9), [g acetone/g substrate] - k 9 constant in Equation (10), [g ethanol/g substrate] - k 10 constant in Equation (11), [g acetoin/g substrate] - k 11 constant in Equation (12), [g lactic acid/g substrate] - K I Inhibition constant, [g inhibitory products/L] - ke maintenance energy requirement for the cell, [g substrate/(g biomass.h)] - K AA acetic acid saturation constant, [g acetic acid/L] - K BA butyric acid saturation constant, [g butyric acid/L] - K S Monod's saturation constant, [g substrate/L] - LA lactic acid concentration in the fermentation broth, [g/L] - m i ,n i constants in Equation (14) - n empirical constant, dependent on degree of inhibition. - P concentration of inhibitory products (B+BA+AA), [g/L] - P max maximum value of product concentration to inhibit the fermentation, [g/L] - pKa equilibrium constant - r A rate of acetone production, [g acetone/L.h] - r AA rate of acetic acid production, [g acetic acid/L.h] - r AT rate of acetoin production, [g acetoin/L.h] - r B rate of butanol production, [g butanol/L.h] - r BA rate of butyric acid production, [g butyric acid/L.h] - r E rate of ethanol production, [g ethanol/L.h] - RPS Relative Parameter Sensitivity - r LA rate of lactic acid production, [g lactic acid/L.h] - r S dS/dt=total substrate consumption rate, [g substrate/L.h] - r S substrate utilization rate, [g substrate/L.h] - S substrate concentration in the fermentation broth, [g substrate/L] - S 0 initial substrate concentration, [substrate/L] - t time, [h] - X biomass concentration, [g/L] - Y X yield of biomass with respect to substrate, [g biomass/g substrate] - Y P i yield of metabolic product with respect to substrate, [g product/g substrate] Derivatives dX/dt rate of biomass production, [g biomass/L.h] - dP i /dt rate of product formation, [g product/L.h] Greek letters specific growth rate of the culture, [h–1] - I specific growth rate of the culture in the presence of the inhibitory products, [h–1] - µmax maximum specific growth rate of the culture, [h–1]  相似文献   

6.
Summary The energetics, enzyme activities and end-product synthesis of Zymomonas mobilis 113 in continuous culture were studied after the shift from an anaerobic to an aerobic environment. Aeration diminished ethanol yield and lactic acid concentration, but increased glucose consumption rate and production of acetic acid. After the shift to aerobic conditions reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) [NAD(P)H]-oxidase activity was stimulated. Washed cell suspensions consumed oxygen with glucose, lactate and ethanol as substrates. The aerobic Z. mobilis 113 regulated their intracellular redox balance by production and reoxidation of the end products, coupled with the formation of NAD(P)H. An increase in transmembrane pH gradient (pH) and a decrease in intracellular ATP concentration were observed after the shift to aerobic conditions. At low medium redox potential (Eh) values the H+ balance was regulated in an energy-independent way via end-product excretion. Under aerobic conditions this was supplemented by ATP-dependent H+ excretion by the membrane H+-ATPase.Abbreviations D dilution rate (h-1) - S 0 initial glucose concentration (g/l) - Y x/s growth yield (g/mol) - Y p/s product yield (g/g) - q s specific rate of substrate utilization (g/g per hour) - q p specific rate of ethanol formation (g/g per hour) - qo 2 specific rate of CO2 production (mmol/g per hour) - specific growth rate (h-1) - X dry biomass concentration (g/l) - Eh redox potential of culture medium (mV) - pH transmembrane pH gradient (pH units) - pHin intracellular pH - SASE sum of activities of specific enmymes of Entner-Doudoroff pathway  相似文献   

7.
Summary A cellulose hydrolysate from Aspen wood, containing mainly glucose, was fermented into ethanol by a thermotolerant strain MSN77 of Zymomonas mobilis. The effect of the hydrolysate concentration on fermentation parameters was investigated. Growth parameters (specific growth rate and biomass yield) were inhibited at high hydrolysate concentrations. Catabolic parameters (specific glucose uptake rate, specific ethanol productivity and ethanol yield) were not affected. These effects could be explained by the increase in medium osmolality. The results are similar to those described for molasses based media. Strain MSN77 could efficiently ferment glucose from Aspen wood up to a concentration of 60 g/l. At higher concentration, growth was inhibited.Nomenclature S glucose concentration (g/l) - X biomass concentration (g/l) - P ethanol concentration (g/l) - C conversion of glucose (%) - t fermentation time (h) - qS specific glucose uptake rate (g/g.h) - qp specific ethanol productivity (g/g.h) - YINX/S biomass yield (g/g) - Yp/S ethanol yield (g/g) - specific growth rate (h-1)  相似文献   

8.
Summary Bacillus licheniformis S 1684 is able to produce an alkaline serine protease exocellularly. In glucose-limited chemostat cultures the specific rate of protease production was maximal at a -value of 0.22. Above this growth rate protease production was repressed. Dependent on 10–20% of the glucose input was used for exocellular product formation. The degree of reduction of exocellular products was 4.1.Maximum molar growth yields were high and indicate a high efficiency of growth. The values of Y glu max and YO 2 max were 83.8 and 53.3, respectively. When Y glu max was corrected for the amount of glucose used for product formation a value of 100.3 was obtained. These high maximum molar growth yields are most probably caused by a high Y ATP max . Anaerobic batch experiments showed a Y ATP of 14.6.Sometimes the used strain was instable in cell morphology and protease production. Non-protease producing cells most probably develop from producing cells by mutation in the rel-gene. Producing cells most probably are relaxed (rel -) and non-producing cells stringent (rel +).Glossary specific growth rate (h-1) - Y sub growth yield permol substrate (g biomass/mol) - Y max maximum molar growth yield, corrected for maintenance requirements (g biomass/mol) - Y max(corr) Y max corrected for product formation (g biomass/mol) - m sub maintenance requirements (mol/g biomass·h) - m sub(corr) maintenance requirements corrected for product formation (mol/g biomass·h) - Y c fraction of organic substrate converted in biomass - z fraction of organic substrate converted in exocellular products - d fraction of organic substrate converted in CO2 (g mol/g atom C) - Crec% carbon recovery % - average degree of reduction of exocellular products - P/O amount of ATP produced during electron-transport of 2 electrons to oxygen  相似文献   

9.
The product formation during batch fermentation with recombinant E. coli containing a runaway replication plasmid has been examined. Theoretical modelling is combined with experimental work to study the effect of operating conditions. In particular the influence of induction profile has been investigated. High sensitivity to operating conditions is observed, and both model and experimental data illustrate the presence of very narrow limits for an optimal induction profile.List of Symbols f i function for allocation of energy to the i'th reaction in the one substrate model - g i function for allocation of energy to the i'th reaction in the two substrate model - h function for inhibition by plasmid material - K i (h–1) kinetic rate constant for the i'th reaction - k i (g/l) saturation constants - K p (g P/g biomass) saturation constant for recombinant protein synthesis - K s (g/l) inhibition constant of glucose on acetate metabolism - K p,i (g P/g biomass) inhibition constant of plasmid material on cellular activity - p (g/l) extracellular acetic acid concentration - r i (h–1) specific rate of i'th reaction - s (g/l) extracellular glucose concentration - X i (g i/g biomass) intracellular concentration of the i'th component - ij stoichiometric coefficients for the i'th metabolic product in the j'th reaction - ij stochiometric coefficients for the i'th component in the biotic phase in the j'th reaction - i relative allocation of energy to the i'th reaction with growth on acetate compared with growth on glucose  相似文献   

10.
Summary The uptake of carbohydrates and oxygen by cell suspension cultures of the plant Eschscholtzia californica (California poppy) was studied in relation to biomass production in shake flasks, a 1-1 stirred-tank bioreactor and a 1-1 pneumatically agitated bioreactor. The sequence of carbohydrate uptake was similar in all cases, with sucrose hydrolysis occurring followed by the preferential uptake of glucose. The uptake of fructose was found to be affected by the oxygen supply rate. Carbohydrate utilization occurred at a slower rate in the bioreactors. Apparent biomass yields, Y X/S, ranged from 0.42 to 0.50 g biomass/g carbohydrate, while true biomass yields, Y X/S, were about 0.69 g/g. The maintenance coefficient for carbohydrate, m S, ranged between 0.002 and 0.008 g/dry weight (DW) per hour. The maximum measured specific oxygen uptake rate was 0.56 mmol O2/g DW per hour and occurred early in the growth stage. The decline in specific uptake rate coincided with a decline in cell viability. The oxygen uptake rate was faster in shake flasks, corresponding to the higher growth rate obtained. The true growth yield on oxygen, YX/O2, was calculated to range from 0.83 to 1.23 g biomass/g O2, while the maintenance coefficient, mO2, ranged from 0.15 to 0.25 mmol O2/g DW per hour. The growth yields for oxygen determined from the stoichiometry of an elemental balance were within 10% of those calculated from experimental data. Offprint requests to: Raymond L. Legge  相似文献   

11.
Summary Thermoanaerobium brockii was grown in batch and continuous culture at supraoptimal temperatures (>65° C). Specific growth rates were lower in batch (max>1.0 h-1) than in continuous cultures (max1.2–1.4 h-1). Acetone addition to the medium did not increase critical dilution rate significantly. The media used contained significantly less organic material and sulfide than previously reported media; however, yeast extract requirements were shown to be exceptionally high (60% of the glucose concentration used). Organic substrates inhibited growth and product formation in chemostat cultures whereas the slow formation of acetic acid was observed in batch cultures, but also with virtually no growth. The inhibiting concentration was found to be approximately 15 g organic carbon·l-1. The maintenance requirements of T. brockii were in the same range as expected of aerobic extreme thermophiles (ms0.5 g·g-1·h-1) and could be met only by glucose and not by yeast extract. Maintenance was obviously not independent of specific growth rate. Production of the stereospecific alcohol-aldehyde/ketone oxidore-ductase was strictly growth associated and its formation was not affected by acetone added to medium.  相似文献   

12.
Phaffia rhodozyma cells were treated with the mutagenic agent NTG several times and plated on yeast-malt agar containing -ionone as a selective medium. This mutagenesis of the yeast yielded a mutant (NCHU-FS501) with a total carotenoid content of 1454 g g–1 dry biomass. Temperature and pH had only a slight effect on the volumetric pigment production by the red yeast, however astaxanthin yield and specific growth rate were influenced more significantly by temperature and pH. The optimum inoculum size, temperature and air flow rate for astaxanthin formation by the mutant in a bench-top fermentor were 7.5% (v/v), 22.5°C and 3.6 vvm, respectively. Glucose (1%, w/v) as carbon source yielded the highest volumetric astaxanthin production (6.72 g ml–1). Peptone (15.8% total nitrogen) was the best nitrogen source for astaxanthin production (6.72 g ml–1). Pigment formation by the mutant was further improved by increasing the glucose concentration to 3.5%, where the astaxanthin concentration was 16.33 m ml–1. At 4.5% glucose or above astaxanthin formation was inhibited. Control of the pH of the fermentation broth did not improved pigment production.  相似文献   

13.
The inhibitory effect of propionic acid P and biomass concentration X is studied in batch and continuous fermentations with cell recycle.In batch fermentations, the specific growth rate decreases and cancels out at a critical propionic acid concentration Pc 1; the formerly decreasing specific production rate becomes constant after Pc 1 and cancels out when a second critical propionic acid concentration Pc 2 is reached.In continuous fermentation with cell recycle, a similar inhibition is observed with biomass. The specific rates decrease and become constant at a critical biomass concentration Xc. They cancel out at different high biomass concentrations.In both cases, the specific production rate can be related to the specific growth rate by the Luedeking and Piret expression: =+, [1], where the constants and are determined by the fermentation parameters.List of Symbols t h time - X kg/m3 biomass concentration - P kg/m3 propionic acid concentration - A kg/m3 acetic acid concentration - S kg/m3 lactose concentration - dX/dt kg/(m3h) instantaneous rate of cell growth - dP/dt kg/(m3h) instantaneous rate of propionic acid production - h–1 specific growth rate - h–1 specific propionic acid production rate - D h–1 dilution rate  相似文献   

14.
The availability and demand of biosynthetic energy (ATP) is an important factor in the regulation of solvent production in steady state continuous cultures of Clostridium acetobutylicum. The effect of biomass recycle at a variety of dilution rates and recycle ratios under both glucose and non-glucose limited conditions on product yields and selectivities has been investigated. Under conditions of non-glucose limitation, when the ATP supply is not growth-limiting, a lower growth rate imposed by biomass recycle leads to a reduced demand for ATP and substantially higher acetone and butanol yields. When the culture is glucose limited, however, biomass recycle results in lower solvent yields and higher acid yields.List of Symbols A 600 absorbance at 600 nm - ATP adenosine triphosphate - C imol/dm3 concentration of componenti in the fermentor - C i 0 mol/dm3 concentration of componenti in the feed - D h–1 dilution rate - F dm3/h feed flow rate - FdH2 ferredoxin, reduced form - NAD nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, oxidized form - NADH nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced form - NfF mmol/g/h NADH produced from oxidation of FdH2 per unit biomass per unit time - P dm3/h filtrate flow during biomass recycle operation - PCRP C-mole carbon per C-mole glucose utilized percent of (substrate) carbon recovered in products - R recycle ratio,P/F - SPR mmol/g/h specific production rate - X imol product/100 mol glucose utilized product yield - Y ATP g biomass/mol ATP biomass yield on ATP - Y GLU g biomass/mol glucose biomass yield on glucose - Y ig biomass/mol biomass yield on nutrienti - h–1 specific growth rate  相似文献   

15.
Summary The fermentation of an equimolar mixture of glucose and fructose into ethanol and sorbitol by a glucose negative mutant ofZymomonas mobilis was monitored. The results were analyzed using a recently described method based on polynomial fitting and calculation of intantaneous and overall parameters. These parameters described well the physiology of this mixed-substrate mixed-product fermentation. Growth of the mutant was greatly inhibited on this medium. Fructose was quantitatively converted into sorbitol while glucose was oxidized into gluconic acid .This latter product was utilized as substrate for cell growth and ethanol production.Nomenclature X biomass concentration, g/l - S total sugar concentration, g/l - Glu glucose concentration, g/l - Fru fructose concentration, g/l - Sor sorbitol concentration, g/l - P ethanol concentration, g/l - t fermentation time, h - specific growth rate, h-1 - qs specific sugar uptake rate, g/g.h - qG specific glucose uptake rate, g/g.h - qF specific fructose uptake rate, g/g.h - qP specific ethanol productivity, g/g.h - qSor specific sorbitol productivity, g/g.h - YX/S biomass yield on total sugar, g/g - YP/S ethanol yield on total sugar, g/g - YSor/S sorbitol yield on total sugar, g/g - ySor/f sorbitol yield on fructose, g/g - YP/G ethanol yield on glucose, g/g  相似文献   

16.
Summary Geotrichum sp. and Trichoderma sp. isolated from petrochemical effluent treatment plant activated sludge completely degraded 2 g acrylic acid/l as sole carbon source in 4 d. However, after neutralization with Ca(OH)2, concentration as high as 10 g/l was degraded in 6 d. During the degradation acetic acid and -hydroxy propionic acid transiently accumulated.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Maximal molar growth yields (Y sub max ) and protease production ofBacillus licheniformis S 1684 during NH 4 + -, O2-, and NH 4 + +O2-limitation with either glucose or citrate as carbon and energy source and during glucose-, and citratelimitation in chemostat cultures were determined. Protease production was repressed by excess ammonia when glucose served as C/E-source. Glucose and citrate repressed protease production during NH 4 + -limitation. A low oxygen tension enbanced protease production at low -values. It was concluded that, besides ammonia repression, catabolite flux and oxygen tension influence protease production, indicating that the energy status of the cell is important for the level of protease production.Y sub max -values were high during glucose-limitation and indicate a high efficiency of growth caused by a highY ATP max . During NH 4 + -, O2-, and NH 4 + +O2-limitation with glucose as C/E-values were lower than during glucose limitation. The lowerY sub max -values were due to a lower efficiency of energy conservation.Y sub max -values during limitations with citrate as C/E-source were lower than during limitations with glucose as C/E-source.Nomenclature specific growth rate (h-1) - Y sub growth yield per mol substrate (g biomass/mol) - Y max maximal molar growth yield corrected for maintenance requirements (g biomass/mol) - Y max (corr) Y max corrected for product formation (g biomass/mol) - m sub maintenance requirements (mol/g biomass·h) - m sub (corr) maintenance requirements corrected for product formation (mol/g biomass·h) - q port max maximal specific rate of protease production (E440/mg DW·h)  相似文献   

18.
Summary The present study describes the growth of Pseudomonas putida cells (ATCC 33015) in batch and continuous cultures on two toxic substrates; toluene and m-toluic acid as sole carbon and energy sources. In fed-batch cultures on m-toluic acid up to 3.55 g cell dry weight/1 were achieved with a maximal specific growth rate (max) of 0.1 h-1. The average cellular yield was 1.42 g cell dry weight/g m-toluic acid utilized. When liquid toluene was added to shake-flask cultures in the presence of 0.7 g/1 m-toluic acid, the average cellular yield obtained was 1.3 g cell dry weight/g toluene utilized and the max was 0.13 h-1. Growth on toluene vapour in the presence of 0.7 g/l m-toluic acid in batch cultures resulted in a cellular yield of 1.28 g cell dry weight/g toluene utilized, with growth kinetics almost identical to those with liquid toluene (max liquid=0.13 h-1, max vapour=0.12 h-1). The maximal biomass concentration was 3.8 g cell dry weight/l, obtained in both cases after 100 h of incubation. Pseudomonas putida was grown in a chemostat initially on 0.7 g/l m-toluic acid and vapour toluene and then in the steady state on toluene as the sole source of carbon and energy. Toluene was added continuously to the culture as vapour with the inflowing airstream. Chemostat cultures could be maintained at steady state for several months on toluene. The maximal biomass concentration obtained in the chemostat culture was 3.2 g cell dry weight/l. The maximum specific growth rate was 0.13 h-1, with a cellular yield of 1.05 g cell dry weight/g toluene utilized. Approximately 70% of the toluene consumed was converted into biomass, and the remainder was converted to CO2 and unidentified byproducts.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Growth and ethanol production by three strains (MSN77, thermotolerant, SBE15, osmotolerant and wild type ZM4) of the bacterium Zymomonas mobilis were tested in a rich medium containing the hexose fraction from a cellulose hydrolysate (Aspen wood). The variations of yield and kinetic parameters with fermentation time revealed an inhibition of growth by the ethanol produced. This inhibition may result from the increase in medium osmolality due to ethanol formation from glucose.Nomenclature S glucose concentration (g/L) - C conversion of glucose (%) - t fermentation time (h) - qS specific glucose uptake rate (g/g.h) - qp specific ethanol productivity (g/g.h) - Qp volumetric ethanol productivity (g/L.h) - QX volumetric biomass productivity (g/L.h) - YX/S biomass yield (g/g) - Yp/S ethanol yield (g/g) - specific growth rate (h-1)  相似文献   

20.
Summary A method for growing acetic acid bacteria from high percentage submerged vinegar fermentations was established by overflowing soft agar, containing acetic acid, with fermenting reactor fluid. Mixed cultures were found in a submerged process that was working well (1), in a submerged process that had broken down (2), and in a vinegar generator (3). The strains differed in part from each other with respect to tolerance towards acetic acid, ethanol, pH and in other physiological criteria. All strains that were isolated from (1) and some from (3) were specialized for acetate media as they needed acetic acid and low pH values (2.1–3.8) in addition to yeast extract and glucose or ethanol. We suppose that they belonged to the acetic acid-producing strains active in the process. None of the strains derived from (2) was of this acetophilic type. All except one of the stains from (2) belonged to the species Acetobacter hansenii, the other cultures were of A. pasteurianus.  相似文献   

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