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1.
Candida parapsilosis was grown for 59 h in a medium containing corn cob hydrolysate consisting of 50 g xylose l–1, 3.0 g glucose l–1, 2.0 g arabinose l–1, and 0.9 g acetic acid l–1. A biomass of 9.1 g l–1 was produced with 36 g xylitol l–1 and 2.5 g ethanol l–1. In a medium containing 50 g xylose l–1 instead of corn cob hydrolysate, the concentrations of cells, xylitol, and ethanol were 8.6 g l–1, 33 g l–1, and 0.2 g l–1, respectively. The differences between two cultures were due to the glucose and arabinose in the corn cob hydrolysate stimulating growth and the low concentration of acetic acid stimulating xylitol production.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetic studies are presented for xylitol production and growth of the yeast Candida parapsilosis ATCC 28474. The oxygen supply influence on xylitol production from xylose was investigated. No metabolic activity was detected in anaerobic conditions. In contrast, it was found that under low aeration rates (0.1-0.2 vvm), xylitol is produced. Xylitol production decreases when air flow to reactor is augmented. An unstructured model is proposed for the kinetic behaviour analysis of yeast growing in batch culture. A simplex method was used for the estimation of model parameters. The parameter confidence intervals were also calculated.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of culture conditions on xylitol production rate was investigated using Candida tropicalis IFO 0618. From the variance analysis of xylitol production rate, it was found that initial yeast extract concentration was highly significant (99%), while the interaction between D-xylose concentration and aeration rate was significant (95%). These results show the importance of initial yeast extract concentration and of the balance between D-xylose concentration and aeration in the production of xylitol. It was also clearly shown that C. tropicalis needed more yeast extract concentration for efficient xylitol production than for its growth. In order to enhance xylitol production rate, culture conditions were optimized by the Box-Wilson method. In this respect, initial D-xylose concentration, yeast extract concentration, and K(L)a were chosen as the independent factors in 2(3)-factorial experimental design. As the result of experiments, a maximum xylitol production rate of 2.67 g/L . h was obtained when initial D-xylose concentration and yeast extract concentration were 172.0 and 21.0 g/L, respectively, and K(L)a was 451.50 h(-1) by 90% oxygen gas. (c) 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Chemostat study of xylitol production by Candida guilliermondii   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The mechanism of production of xylitol from xylose by Candida guilliermondii was studied using chemostat cultures and enzymatic assays. The maximum dilution rate in aerobic conditions was 0.34 1/h. No xylitol was produced. Under oxygen-limited conditions xylose uptake was impaired and glycerol accumulated but no xylitol was detected. Under transient oxygen limitation, caused by a gradual decrease in the agitation rate, onset of xylitol, acetate and residual xylose accumulation occurred simultaneously when q O2 dropped below 25 mmol/C-mmol cell dry weight (CDW) per hour. Ethanol and glycerol started to accumulate when q O2 dropped below 20 mmol/C-mmol CDW per hour. The highest in vitro enzyme activities were found at the lowest dilution rate studied (0.091/h) under aerobic conditions. The amount of active enzymes or cofactor availability did not limit the rate of xylose consumption. Our results confirm that a surplus of NADH during transient oxygen limitation inhibited the activity of xylitol dehydrogenase which resulted in xylitol accumulation. Phosphoglucoisomerase (E.C. 5.3.1.9.) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (E.C. 1.1.1.49) activities suggest re-shuttling of the metabolites into the pentose phosphate pathway. Received: 7 March 2000 / Received revision: 9 June 2000 / Accepted: 18 June 2000  相似文献   

5.
Summary The ability of C. guilliermondii and C. parapsilosis to ferment xylose to xylitol was evaluated under different oxygen transfer rates in order to enhance the xylitol yield. In C. guilliermondii, a maximal xylitol yield of 0.66 g/g was obtained when oxygen transfer rate was 2.2 mmol/l.h. Optimal conditions to produce xylitol by C. parapsilosis (0.75 g/g) arose from cultures at pH 4.75 with 0.4 mmoles of oxygen/l.h. The response of the yeasts to anaerobic conditions has shown that oxygen was required for xylose metabolism.Nomenclature max maximum specific growth rate (per hour) - qSmax maximum specific rate of xylose consumption (g xylose per g dry biomass per hour) - qpmax maximum specific productivity of xylitol (g xylitol per g dry biomass per hour) - Qp average volumetric productivity of xylitol (g xylitol per liter per hour) - YP/S xylitol yield (g xylitol per g substrate utilized) - YP'/S glycerol yield (g glycerol per g substrate utilized) - YX/S biomass yield (g dry biomass per g substrate utilized)  相似文献   

6.
Candida tropicalis, a strain isolated from the sludge of a factory manufacturing xylose, produced a high xylitol concentration of 131 g/l from 150 g/l xylose at 45 h in a flask. Above 150 g/l xylose, however, volumetric xylitol production rates decreased because of a lag period in cell growth. In fed-batch culture, the volumetric production rate and xylitol yield from xylose varied substantially with the controlled xylose concentration and were maximum at a controlled xylose concentration of 60 g/l. To increase the xylitol yield from xylose, feeding experiments using different ratios of xylose and glucose were carried out in a fermentor. The maximum xylitol yield from 300 g/l xylose was 91% at a glucose/xylose feeding ratio of 15%, while the maximum volumetric production rate of xylitol was 3.98 g l−1 h−1 at a glucose/xylose feeding ratio of 20%. Xylitol production was found to decrease markedly as its concentration rose above 250 g/l. In order to accumulate xylitol to 250 g/l, 270 g/l xylose was added in total, at a glucose/xylose feeding ratio of 15%. Under these conditions, a final xylitol production of 251 g/l, which corresponded to a yield of 93%, was obtained from 270 g/l xylose in 55 h. Received: 20 April 1998 / Received revision: 29 May 1998 / Accepted: 19 June 1998  相似文献   

7.
Xylose utilization is inhibited by glucose uptake in xylose-assimilating yeasts, including Candida tropicalis, resulting in limitation of xylose uptake during the fermentation of glucose/xylose mixtures. In this study, a heterologous xylose transporter gene (At5g17010) from Arabidopsis thaliana was selected because of its high affinity for xylose and was codon-optimized for functional expression in C. tropicalis. The codon-optimized gene was placed under the control of the GAPDH promoter and was integrated into the genome of C. tropicalis strain LXU1 which is xyl2-disrupted and NXRG (codon-optimized Neurospora crassa xylose reductase) introduced. The xylose uptake rate was increased by 37–73 % in the transporter expression-enhanced strains depending on the glucose/xylose mixture ratio. The recombinant strain LXT2 in 500-mL flask culture using glucose/xylose mixtures showed a xylose uptake rate that was 29 % higher and a xylitol volumetric productivity (1.14 g/L/h) that was 25 % higher than the corresponding rates for control strain LXU1. Membrane protein extraction and Western blot analysis confirmed the successful heterologous expression and membrane localization of the xylose transporter in C. tropicalis.  相似文献   

8.
Kim TB  Lee YJ  Kim P  Kim CS  Oh DK 《Biotechnology letters》2004,26(8):623-627
Long-term cell recycle fermentations of Candida tropicalis were performed over 14 rounds of fermentation. The average xylitol concentrations, fermentation times, volumetric productivities and product yields for 14 rounds were 105 g l–1, 333 h, 4.4 g l–1 h–1 and 78%, respectively, in complex medium; and 110 g l–1, 284 h, 5.4 g l–1 h–1 and 81%, respectively, in a chemically defined medium. These productivities were 1.7 and 2.4 times those with batch fermentation in the complex and chemically defined media, respectively. The xylitol yield from xylose with cell recycle fermentation using the chemically defined medium was 81% (w/w), which was 7% greater than the xylitol yield with batch fermentation (74%); both modes of fermentation gave the same yield using the complex medium. These results suggest that the chemically defined medium is more suitable for production of xylitol than complex medium.  相似文献   

9.
Xylitol, a functional sweetener, was produced from xylose by biological conversion using Candida tropicalis ATCC 13803. Based on a two-substrate fermentation using glucose for cell growth and xylose for xylitol production, fed-batch fermentations were undertaken to increase the final xylitol concentration. The effects of xylose and xylitol on xylitol production rate were studied to determine the optimum concentrations for fed-batch fermentation. Xylose concentration in the medium (100 g l−1) and less than 200 g l−1 total xylose plus xylitol concentration were determined as optimum for maximum xylitol production rate and xylitol yield. Increasing the concentrations of xylose and xylitol decreased the rate and yield of xylitol production and the specific cell growth rate, probably because of an increase in osmotic stress that would interfere with xylose transport, xylitol flux to secretion to cell metabolism. The feeding rate of xylose solution during the fed-batch mode of operation was determined by using the mass balance equations and kinetic parameters involved in the equations in order to increase final xylitol concentration without affecting xylitol and productivity. The optimized fed-batch fermentation resulted in 187 g l−1 xylitol concentration, 0.75 g xylitol g xylose−1 xylitol yield and 3.9 g xylitol l−1 h−1 volumetric productivity. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2002) 29, 16–19 doi:10.1038/sj.jim.7000257 Received 15 October 2001/ Accepted in revised form 30 March 2002  相似文献   

10.
Production of xylitol from xylose in batch fermentations of Candida mogii ATCC 18364 is discussed in the presence of glucose as the cosubstrate. Various initial ratios of glucose and xylose concentrations are assessed for their impact on yield and rate of production of xylitol. Supplementation with glucose at the beginning of the fermentation increased the specific growth rate, biomass yield and volumetric productivity of xylitol compared with fermentation that used xylose as the sole carbon source. A mathematical model is developed for eventual use in predicting the product formation rate and yield. The model parameters were estimated from experimental observations, using a genetic algorithm. Batch fermentations, which were carried out with xylose alone and a mixture of xylose and glucose, were used to validate the model. The model fitted well with the experimental data of cell growth, substrate consumption and xylitol production.  相似文献   

11.
A detoxification method using activated charcoal with concentrated rice straw hemicellulosic hydrolysate improved the conversion of xylose to xylitol by the yeast Candida guilliermondii by 22%. This was achieved when the hydrolysate:charcoal ratio was 40 g g–1, resulting in removal of 27% of phenolic compounds. Under this condition, the xylitol yield factor (0.72 g g–1) and volumetric productivity (0.61 g l–1 h–1) were close to those attained in a semi-defined medium simulating hydrolysate sugars.  相似文献   

12.
Glucose repressed xylose utilization inCandida tropicalis pre-grown on xylose until glucose reached approximately 0–5 g l–1. In fermentations consisting of xylose (93 g l–1) and glucose (47 g l–1), xylitol was produced with a yield of 0.65 g g–1 and a specific rate of 0.09 g g–1 h–1, and high concentrations of ethanol were also produced (25 g l–1). If the initial glucose was decreased to 8 g l–1, the xylitol yield (0.79 g g–1) and specific rate (0.24 g g–1 h–1) increased with little ethanol formation (<5 g l–1). To minimize glucose repression, batch fermentations were performed using an aerobic, glucose growth phase followed by xylitol production. Xylitol was produced under O2 limited and anaerobic conditions, but the specific production rate was higher under O2 limited conditions (0.1–0.4 vs. 0.03 g g–1 h–1). On-line analysis of the respiratory quotient defined the time of xylose reductase induction.  相似文献   

13.
Candida peltata NRRL Y-6888 to ferment xylose to xylitol was evaluated under different fermentation conditions such as pH, temperature, aeration, substrate concentration and in the presence of glucose, arabinose, ethanol, methanol and organic acids. Maximum xylitol yield of 0.56 g g−1 xylose was obtained when the yeast was cultivated at pH 6.0, 28°C and 200 rpm on 50 g L−1 xylose. The yeast produced ethanol (0.41 g g−1 in 40 h) from glucose (50 g L−1) and arabitol (0.55 g g−1 in 87 h) from arabinose (50 g L−1). It preferentially utilized glucose > xylose > arabinose from mixed substrates. Glucose (10 g L−1), ethanol (7.5 g L−1) and acetate (5 g L−1) inhibited xylitol production by 61, 84 and 68%, respectively. Arabinose (10 g L−1) had no inhibitory effect on xylitol production. Received 24 December 1998/ Accepted in revised form 18 March 1999  相似文献   

14.
Microbial production of xylitol from D-xylose using Candida tropicalis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Candida tropicalis DSM 7524 was used to produce xylitol from d-xylose. The fermentation conditions were optimized during continuous cultivation. The strain employed showed no great dependence upon temperature in a range between 30° C and 37° C. It achieved its best yield of xylitol from d-xylose at a pH value of 2.5. Such low pH values allow non sterile cultivation, which is a major economic factor. With an oxygen uptake rate of 0.8–1 ml oxygen per litre culture medium, the C. tropicalis produce xylitol at a yield of between 77% and 80% of the theoretical value. Higher yeast extract concentrations prevent the conversion of d-xylose into xylitol. d-xylose acts as a growth inhibitor in higher concentrations. The maximum xylitol yield was reached at a d-xylose concentration of around 100 g/l. In a non sterile batch culture with substrate shift 220 g/l xylitol were produced from 300 g/l d-xylose at a xylitol productivity rate of 0.37 g/(lh). In order to increase the specific yield, C. tropicalis was immobilised on porous glass and cultivated in a fluidized bed reactor. In a continuous non sterile cultivation with immobilised cells 155 g/l d-xylose produced 90–95% g/l xylitol with a productivity of 1.35 g/(lh).Mr. S. S. da Silva was a visiting scientist to the GBF. He was supported by a scholarship from the National Council of Scientific and Technological Development, Brasilia, Brazil (CNPq).We also would like to gratefully acknowledge the support of Prof. Dr. Michele Vitolo of the University of Sao Paulo, and the Centre for Biotechnology and Chemistry, Lorena, S. P. Brazil, in particular the Department of Fermentative Process.We are grateful to Prof. Rainer Jonas, head of the International Cooperation between Germany/Brazil for the helpful discussions and Dr. Heinrich Lönsdorf (GBF) for the Scanning electron micrographs.Dedicated to the 65th birthday of Prof. Dr. Fritz Wagner.  相似文献   

15.

Objectives

We aimed to asses possible clinically significant differences between C. parapsilosis and other candida species candidemia receiving care in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting.

Methods

The study included 118 adult patients diagnosed as candidemia after admission to the ICU of a university hospital between January 2004 and December 2009. Data about demographic characteristics, underlying diseases, and risk factors for ICU-related candidemia were collected.

Results

During the study period, 118 patients with candidemia were identified among 2,853 patients admitted into the ICU. Candidemia was seen in 41.4 cases per 1,000 ICU admissions. The overall incidence of candidemia in ICU patients during the study period was 2.09 per 1,000 hospital admissions. Of the isolates, 18.6% were C. albicans and 81.4% were C. non-albicans. The species most frequently isolated was C. parapsilosis (66.1%, 78/118). The distribution of other Candida spp. was as follows: 15 had C. tropicalis (12.7%) and 3 had C. glabrata (2.5%). By Statistical analysis, when patients with candidemia who had C. parapsilosis were compared with other Candida spp., the following factors were found to be significantly associated with C. parapsilosis fungemia; intravascular catheters (p = 0.008), malignity (p = 0.049) and age (p = 0.039). Relationship was found between C. tropicalis and hematologic malignancies (p = 0.001).

Conclusions

When infections with a high mortality such as candidemia is suspected in critically ill patients, it is important to know local risk factors and epidemiological distributions of causative agents in selection of empirical and effective antifungal treatment.  相似文献   

16.
AIMS: To evaluate the effect of phosphate buffer concentration on growth and xylitol production by Candida guilliermondii FTI 20037. METHODS AND RESULTS: Fermentations runs were carried out in batch mode employing semisynthetic medium supplemented with phosphate buffer at different concentrations (from 200 to 600 mmol l(-1)). The xylitol yield (Y(P/S)) and volumetric productivity (Q(P)) were improved when the fermentation medium was supplemented with phosphate buffer at concentration of 600 mmol l(-1). Under this condition (Y(P/S)) and (Q(P)) values were 0.75 g g(-1) and 0.66 g l(-1) h(-1), respectively, whereas in the absence of the phosphate buffer these values decreased to 0.52 g g(-1) and 0.44 g l(-1)h(-1) respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The use of phosphate buffer at 600 mmol l(-1) promoted an easier pH control during shake flasks fermentation of C. guilliermondii. In addition the xylitol yield and productivity were significantly improved in response to the supplementation of potassium phosphate in the medium. The increase in these parameters could be related to both osmotic effect and pH control. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This approach provided a method for improving the xylitol production from semisynthetic medium by C. guilliermondii, being possible their use as a simple strategy to achieve efficient fermentation processes employing complex medium such as lignocellulosic hydrolysates.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of other hemicellulosic sugars (arabinose, galactose, mannose and glucose), oxygen limitation, and initial xylose concentration on the fermentation of xylose to xylitol was investigated using experimental design methodology. Oxygen limitation and initial xylose concentration had considerable influences on xylitol production by Canadida tropicalis ATCC 96745. Under semiaerobic conditions, the maximum xylitol yield was 0.62 g/g substrate, while under aerobic conditions, the maximum volumetric productivity was 0.90 g/l h. In the presence of glucose, xylose utilization was strongly repressed and sequential sugar utilization was observed. Ethanol produced from the glucose caused 50% reduction in xylitol yield when its concentration exceeded 30 g/l. When complex synthetic hemicellulosic sugars were fermented, glucose was initially consumed followed by a simultaneous uptake of the other sugars. The maximum xylitol yield (0.84 g/g) and volumetric productivity (0.49 g/l h) were obtained for substrates containing high arabinose and low glucose and mannose contents.  相似文献   

18.
目的观察近平滑念珠菌在不同培养基的形态转换现象,以及温度对其形态转换的影响。方法收集近平滑念珠菌正常人皮肤携带株及临床致病株和标准株,接种于改良Lee培养基和含桃红B的YPD培养基,观察其不同形态转换,以及温度变化对光滑(W)与皱褶(O)形态转换的影响。结果近平滑念珠菌在Lee培养基和含桃红B的YPD培养基上,均可以出现多种形态以及一定频率W-O转换现象。在观察W向O形态转换过程中发现,与25℃培养温度相比,37℃条件下光滑菌落形态占更多的比例。结论近平滑念珠菌体外培养时存在形态转换及W-O转换现象,且于37℃时更易保持光滑形态。含桃红B的YPD培养基也可以用于基本的W-O形态转换观察。  相似文献   

19.
Xylose production by Candida guilliermondii FTI 20037 was carried out in a synthetic medium in the presence of 0–100 g methanol l–1, 0–0.7 g furfural l–1 or 0–1.3 g acetic acid l–1. Kinetic results show a mixed inhibition mechanism in all three cases. Maximum specific productivity and saturation constant for product formation were, in the absence of inhibition, 3.6 gP gX –1 h–1 and 232 gS l–1, respectively, while the inhibition constants, K i and K i, were 17 and 50 g methanol l–1, 0.62 and 7.0 g furfural l–1, 0.69 and 3.5 g acetic acid l–1, which suggests the following order of inhibition: furfural > acetic acid > methanol.  相似文献   

20.
In this study we used the yeast Candida guilliermondii FTI 20037 immobilized by entrapment in Ca-alginate beads (2.5-3 mm diameter) for xylitol production from concentrated sugarcane bagasse hemicellulosic hydrolysate in a repeated batch system. The fermentation runs were carried out in 125- and 250-ml Erlenmeyer flasks placed in an orbital shaker at 30 degrees C and 200 rpm during 72 h, keeping constant the proportion between work volume and flask total volume. According to the results, cell viability was substantially high (98%) in all fermentative cycles. The values of parameters xylitol yield and volumetric productivity increased significantly with the reutilization of the immobilized biocatalysts. The highest values of xylitol final concentration (11.05 g/l), yield factor (0.47 g/g) and volumetric productivity (0.22 g/lh) were obtained in 250-ml Erlenmeyer flasks containing 80 ml of medium plus 20 ml of immobilized biocatalysts. The support used in this study (Ca-alginate) presented stability in the experimental conditions used. The results show that the use of immobilized cells is a promising approach for increasing the xylitol production rates.  相似文献   

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