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1.
Aerobic chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were performed under carbon-, nitrogen-, and dual carbon- and nitrogen-limiting conditions. The glucose concentration was kept constant, whereas the ammonium concentration was varied among different experiments and different dilution rates. It was found that both glucose and ammonium were consumed at the maximal possible rate, i.e., the feed rate, over a range of medium C/N ratios and dilution rates. To a small extent, this was due to a changing biomass composition, but much more important was the ability of uncoupling between anabolic biomass formation and catabolic energy substrate consumption. When ammonium started to limit the amount of biomass formed and hence the anabolic flow of glucose, this was totally or at least partly compensated for by an increased catabolic glucose consumption. The primary response when glucose was present in excess of the minimum requirements for biomass production was an increased rate of respiration. The calculated specific oxygen consumption rate, at D = 0.07 h-1, was more than doubled when an additional nitrogen limitation was imposed on the cells compared with that during single glucose limitation. However, the maximum respiratory capacity decreased with decreasing nitrogen concentration. The saturation level of the specific oxygen consumption rate decreased from 5.5 to 6.0 mmol/g/h under single glucose limitation to about 4.0 mmol/g/h at the lowest nitrogen concentration tested. The combined result of this was that the critical dilution rate, i.e., onset of fermentation, was as low as 0.10 h-1 during growth in a medium with a low nitrogen concentration compared with 0.20 h-1 obtained under single glucose limitation.  相似文献   

2.
Ethanol production by Kluyveromyces fragilis and Saccharomyces cerevisiae was studied using cottage cheese whey in which 80 to 90% of the lactose present had been prehydrolyzed to glucose and galactose. Complete fermentation of the sugar by K. fragilis required 120 hr at 30°C in lactase-hydrolyzed whey compared to 72 hr in nonhydrolyzed whey. This effect was due to a diauxic fermentation pattern in lactase-hydrolyzed whey with glucose being fermented before galactose. Ethanol yields of about 2% were obtained in both types of whey when K. fragilis was the organism used for fermentation. Saccharomyces cerevisiae produced alcohol from glucose more rapidly than K. fragilis, but galactose was fermented only when S. cerevisiae was pregrown on galactose. Slightly lower alcohol yields were obtained with S. cerevisiae, owing to the presence of some lactose in the whey which was not fermented by this organism. Although prehydrolysis of lactose in whey and whey fractions is advantageous in that microbial species unable to ferment lactose may be utilized, diauxie and galactose utilization problems must be considered.  相似文献   

3.
A comparative study was made of the in vitro respiratory capacity of mitochondria isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida utilis grown in glucose-limited chemostat cultures. An electron-microscopic analysis of whole cells revealed that the volume density of mitochondria was the same in both yeasts. Mitochondria from both organisms exhibited respiratory control with NADH, pyruvate + malate, 2-oxoglutarate + acetate or malate, and ethanol. The rate of oxidation of these compounds by isolated mitochondria was the same in both yeasts. The rate of oxidation of NADPH by mitochondria from S. cerevisiae was 10 times lower than by those from C. utilis. However, this low rate probably has no influence on the overall in vivo respiratory capacity of S. cerevisiae. The results are discussed in relation to the differences in metabolic behaviour between S. cerevisiae and C. utilis upon transition of cultures from glucose limitation to glucose excess. It is concluded that the occurrence of alcoholic fermentation in S. cerevisiae under these conditions does not result from a bottleneck in the respiratory capacity of the mitochondria.  相似文献   

4.
Colony development of the dimorphic yeasts Yarrowia lipolytica and Candida boidinii on solid agar substrates under glucose limitation served as a model system for mycelial development of higher filamentous fungi. Strong differences were observed in the behaviour of both yeasts: C. boidinii colonies reached a final colony extension which was small compared to the size of the growth field. They formed cell-density profiles which steeply declined along the colony radius and no biomass decay processes could be detected. The stop of colony extension coincided with the depletion of glucose from the growth substrate. These findings supported the hypothesis that glucose-limited C. boidinii colonies can be regarded as populations of single cells which grow according to a diffusion-limited growth mechanism. Y. lipolytica colonies continued to extend after the depletion of the primary nutrient resource, glucose, until the populations covered the entire growth field which was accomplished by utilization of mycelial biomass.  相似文献   

5.
The lactic yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus var.marxianus (formerly K. fragilis) autolyzates at faster rate than Saccharomyces cerevisiae. During K. marxianus autolysis, quite similar release kinetics were observed for intracellular space markers (potassium ions, nucleotides), cell-wall components (polysaccharides, N-acetyl-D-Glucosamine) and non specific products (amino nitrogen). By Scanning Electronic Microscopy examination, no cell burst was observed, but a variation in cell shape (from ellipsoidal to cylindrical), as well as a 43% decrease in the internal volume were observed. The mechanism proposed for S. cerevisiae autolysis appeared also likely for K. marxianus.Abbreviations NacGlc N-acetyl-D-glucosamine - x total biomass (dry cellular weight) concentration  相似文献   

6.
Aerobic glucose-limited chemostat cultivations were conducted with Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains NRRL Y132, ATCC 4126 and CBS 8066, using a complex medium. At low dilution rates all three strains utilised glucose oxidatively with high biomass yield coefficients, no ethanol production and very low steady-state residual glucose concentrations in the culture. Above a threshold dilution rate, respiro-fermentative (oxido-reductive) metabolism commenced, with simultaneous respiration and fermentation occurring, which is typical of Crabtree-positive yeasts. However, at high dilution rates the three strains responded differently. At high dilution rates S. cerevisiae CBS 8066 produced 7–8 g ethanol L−1 from 20 g glucose L−1 with concomitant low levels of residual glucose, which increased markedly only close to the wash-out dilution rate. By contrast, in the respiro-fermentative region both S. cerevisiae ATCC 4126 and NRRL Y132 produced much lower levels of ethanol (3–4 g L−1) than S. cerevisiae CBS 8066, concomitant with very high residual sugar concentrations, which was a significant deviation from Monod kinetics and appeared to be associated either with high growth rates or with a fermentative (or respiro-fermentative) metabolism. Supplementation of the cultures with inorganic or organic nutrients failed to improve ethanol production or glucose assimilation. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2000) 24, 231–236. Received 09 August 1999/ Accepted in revised form 18 December 1999  相似文献   

7.
Anaerobic fermentation of glucose (20 g/l) by Saccharomyces cerevisiae CBS 8066 was studied in a chemostat (dilution rate = 0.05–0.25 h–1) at different concentrations of the nitrogen source (5.00 g/l or 0.36 g/l ammonium sulphate). The ethanol yield (g ethanol produced/g glucose consumed) was found to be higher and the glycerol yield (g glycerol formed/g glucose consumed) lower during nitrogen limitation than under carbon limitation. The biomass yield on ATP (g dry weight biomass produced/mol ATP consumed) was consequently found to be lower during nitrogen-limited conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Summary A method for reduction of nucleic acid levels in preparations of the yeastsSaccharomyces cerevisiae andKluyromyces fragilis by means of alkaline treatment has been developed. Under similar conditions (4.5% NH4OH, 65° C, 30 min) a low nucleic acid content (less than 2%) was obtained for both strains. Higher losses of proteins and biomass were obtained withK. fragilis than withS. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

9.
Aerobic growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae on glucose was investigated, focusing on the heat evolution as it relates to biomass and ethanol synthesis. “Aerobic fermentation” and “aerobic respiration” were established respectively in the experimental system by performing batch and fed-batch experiments. “Balanced growth” batch cultivations were carried out with initial sugar concentrations ranging from 10 to 70 g/L, resulting in different degrees of catabolite repression. The fermentative heat generation was continuously monitored in addition to the key culture parameters such as ethanol production rate, CO2 evolution rate, O2 uptake rate, specific growth rate, and sugar consumption rate. The respective variations of the above quantities reflecting the variations in the catabolic activity of the culture were studied. This was done in order to evaluate the microbial regulatory system, the energetics of microbial growth including the rate of heat evolution and the distribution of organic substrate between respiration and fermentation. This study was supported by closing C, energy, and electron balances on the system. The comparison of the fractions of substrate energy evolved as heat (δh) with the fraction of available electrons transferred to oxygen (?O2) indicated equal values of the two (0.46) in the aerobic respiration (fed-batch cultivation). However, the glucose effect in batch cultivations resulted in smaller ?O2 than δh, while both values decreased in their absolute values. The evaluation of the heat energetic yield coefficients, together with the fraction of the available electrons transferred to O, contributed to the estimation of the extent of heat production through oxidative phosphorylation.  相似文献   

10.
Xylulose fermentation by four strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and two strains of xylose-fermenting yeasts, Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 and Candida shehatae NJ 23, was compared using a mineral medium at a cell concentration of 10 g (dry weight)/l. When xylulose was the sole carbon source and fermentation was anaerobic, S. cerevisiae ATCC 24860 and CBS 8066 showed a substrate consumption rate of 0.035 g g cells–1 h–1 compared with 0.833 g g cells–1 h–1 for glucose. Bakers' yeast and S. cerevisiae isolate 3 consumed xylulose at a much lower rate although they fermented glucose as rapidly as the ATCC and the CBS strains. While P. stipitis CBS 6054 consumed both xylulose and glucose very slowly under anaerobic conditions, C. shehatae NJ 23 fermented xylulose at a rate of 0.345 g g cells–1 h–1, compared with 0.575 g g cells–1 h–1 for glucose. For all six strains, the addition of glucose to the xylulose medium did not enhance the consumption of xylulose, but increased the cell biomass concentrations. When fermentation was performed under oxygen-limited conditions, less xylulose was consumed by S. cerevisiae ATCC 24860 and C. shehatae NJ 23, and 50%–65% of the assimilated carbon could not be accounted for in the products determined.  相似文献   

11.
A model is proposed that accounts for the decreases in yield which occur in chemostat cultures of mesophilic yeasts at superoptimal growth temperatures. Two yield depressing effects were identified, one due to increased maintenance requirements by the viable fraction of the population, the other due to energy substrate dissipation by the nonviable fraction. The two effects are functions of the dilution rate, as is the fraction of nonviable cells. Experimental results were obtained on the yield, maintenance, and dissipation of energy substrate in a glucose-limited chemostat culture of a respiration-deficient mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae at 39°C. The rates of glucose utilization for maintenance and for dissipation constituted, respectively, 33–28% and 15–9% of the total glucose utilization rate over the range of dilution rates tested (0.038–0.064 hr?1), while the yield varied over this range from 0.066–0.085 g of biomass (dry wt) per gram of glucose.  相似文献   

12.
The growth and glucose uptake of single cultures of the wine-related yeasts Kluyveromyces thermotolerans, Torulaspora delbrueckii, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae were investigated. The yeasts had different specific glucose uptake rates (q s) that depended on the residual glucose concentration and the oxygen availability. In mixed cultures, the q s values of the yeasts were not subject to any interaction effects over a wide range of glucose concentrations. Our results strongly indicate that the relative glucose uptake abilities of both non-Saccharomyces yeasts, i.e. the q s(non-Saccharomyces)/q s(S. cerevisiae) ratios, regulated their abilities to compete for space in mixed cultures with S. cerevisiae, which, in turn, regulated their early deaths. This hypothesis enabled us to explain why K. thermotolerans was less able than T. delbrueckii to coexist with S. cerevisiae in mixed cultures. Furthermore, it enabled us to explain why oxygen increased the abilities of K. thermotolerans and T. delbrueckii to coexist with S. cerevisiae in the mixed cultures.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The effect of various NaCl concentrations on respiration and fermentation rates in cells with or without added glucose as exogenous substrate as well as on respiratory quotients was determined for Debaryomyces hansenii, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Cryptococcus albidus, and Candida zeylanoides, all yeasts isolated from marine environment. A given strain had about the same respiratory and fermentatory intensity at 0% and 4% NaCl (w/v). A further increase considerably reduced the oxygen uptake or CO2-evolution. D. hansenii was the most NaCl tolerant yeast tested, giving about 10% activity still at a concentration of 24% NaCl, whether the activities of whole cells or cell homogenates were determined. For S. cerevisiae or Cr. albidus the respiratory activity was reduced to about the same degree at 16% NaCl for whole cells, at 12% NaCl for homogenates of Cr. albidus. A somewhat higher NaCl concentration was evidently tolerated for respiration and fermentation than for growth, very obvious in the case of C. zeylanoides.The minimum values for water activity (a w) permitting 10% respiration activity were higher when produced by electrolytes (NaCl, KCl, or Na2SO4), lower when due to sugars (metabolizable glucose or non-metabolizable lactose) and lowest when due to glycerol. The a w per se was evidently not solely decisive for the limitation of respiration activity.Attempts were made to assess an effect of high NaCl concentrations on the glucose uptake.The potassium content was higher in cells of the highly halotolerant D. hansenii than in those of the other yeasts and decreased with the increase in external, consequently in internal, Na+ concentration. The decrease in K+ content can presumably only proceed to a certain extent, below which the ability for growth and respiration was lost.  相似文献   

14.

Background  

Overflow metabolism is an undesirable characteristic of aerobic cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae during biomass-directed processes. It results from elevated sugar consumption rates that cause a high substrate conversion to ethanol and other bi-products, severely affecting cell physiology, bioprocess performance, and biomass yields. Fed-batch culture, where sucrose consumption rates are controlled by the external addition of sugar aiming at its low concentrations in the fermentor, is the classical bioprocessing alternative to prevent sugar fermentation by yeasts. However, fed-batch fermentations present drawbacks that could be overcome by simpler batch cultures at relatively high (e.g. 20 g/L) initial sugar concentrations. In this study, a S. cerevisiae strain lacking invertase activity was engineered to transport sucrose into the cells through a low-affinity and low-capacity sucrose-H+ symport activity, and the growth kinetics and biomass yields on sucrose analyzed using simple batch cultures.  相似文献   

15.
Four yeasts, Hansenula anomala, Kluyveromyces fragilis, Lodderomyces elongisporus and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, were cultured in two presporulation media at 30 ° C. Media consisted of yeast extract — peptone — acetate and yeast extract — peptone — dextrose broths. Except for K. fragilis, the test yeasts reached a high degree of sporulation when transferred to acetate- and ethanol-supplemented sporulation media. The percentage of S. cerevisiae cells forming asci was as high as 79% after 24 h incubation. H. anomala and L. elongisporus sporulated more rapidly in ethanol- compared to acetate-containing medium. Within test parameters, the concentration of acetate or ethanol, pH, and incubation temperature (25 ° C and 30 ° C) did not substantially influence the extent of sporulation.  相似文献   

16.
The composition of spirits distilled from fermentation of Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus L.) tubers was compared by means of gas chromatography. The microorganisms used in the fermentation processes were the bacterium Zymomonas mobilis, strains 3881 and 3883, the distillery yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, strains Bc16a and D2 and the Kluyveromyces fragilis yeast with an active inulinase. The fermentation of mashed tubers was conducted using a single culture of the distillery yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the bacterium Zymomonas mobilis (after acid or enzymatic hydrolysis) as well as Kluyveromyces fragilis (sterilized mashed tubers). The tubers were simultaneously fermented by mixed cultures of the bacterium or the distillery yeast with K. fragilis. The highest ethanol yield was achieved when Z. mobilis 3881 with a yeast demonstrating inulinase activity was applied. The yield reached 94 % of the theoretical value. It was found that the distillates resulting from the fermentation of mixed cultures were characterized by a relatively lower amount of by‐products compared to the distillates resulting from the single species process. Ester production of 0.30–2.93 g/L, responsible for the aromatic quality of the spirits, was noticed when K. fragilis was applied for ethanol fermentation both in a single culture process and also in the mixed fermentation with the bacterium. Yeast applied in this study caused the formation of higher alcohols to concentrations of 7.04 g/L much greater than those obtained with the bacterium. The concentrations of compounds other than ethanol obtained from Jerusalem artichoke mashed tubers, which were fermented by Z. mobilis, were lower than those achieved for yeasts.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Zymomonas mobilis UQM 2716 was grown anaerobically in continuous culture (D = 0.1/h; 30° C) 3nder glucose or nitrogen limitation at pH 6.5 or 4.0. The rates of glucose consumption and ethanol production were lowest during glucose-limited growth at pH 6.5, but increased during growth at pH 4.0 or under nitrogen limitation, and were highest during nitrogen-limited growth at pH 4.0. The uncoupling agent CCCP substantially increased the rate of glucose consumption by glucose-limited cultures at pH 6.5, but had much less effect at pH 4.0. Washed cells also metabolised glucose rapidly, irrespective of the conditions under which the original cultures were grown, and the rates were variably increased by low pH and CCCP. Broken cells exhibited substantial ATPase activity, which was increased by growth at low pH. It was concluded that the fermentation rates of cultures growing under glucose or nitrogen limitation at pH 6.5, or under glucose limitation at pH 4.0, are determined by the rate at which energy is dissipated by various cellular activities (including growth, ATP-dependent proton extrusion for maintenance of the protonmotive force and the intracellular pH, and an essentially constitutive ATP-wasting reaction that only operates in the presence of excess glucose). During growth under nitrogen limitation at pH 4.0 the rate of energy dissipation is sufficiently high for the fermentation rate to be determined by the inherent catalytic activity of the catabolic pathway.Abbreviations CCCP carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone - qG rate of glucose consumption (g glucose/g dry wt cells/h) - qE rate of ethanol production (g ethanol/g dry wt cells/h) - Y growth yield (g dry wt cells/g glucose) - D dilution rate Offprint requests to: C. W. Jones  相似文献   

18.
Alcohol yields of 6.5% were obtained with Saccharomyces cerevisiae in lactasehydrolyzed acid whey permeate containing 30–35% total solids. Maximum alcohol yields obtained with Kluyveromyces fragilis were 4.5% in lactase-hydrolyzed acid whey permeate at a solids concentration of 20% and 3.7% in normal permeate at a solids concentration of 10%. Saccharomyces cerevisiae efficiently converted the glucose present in lactase-hydrolyzed whey permeates containing 5–30% total solids (2–13% glucose) to alcohol. However, the galactose, which comprised about half the available carbohydrate in lactase-hydrolyzed whey, was not utilized by S. cerevisiae, so that even though alcohol yields were higher when this organism was used, the process was wasteful in that a substantial proportion of the substrate was not fermented. For the process to become commercially feasible, an efficient means of rapidly converting both the galactose and glucose to alcohol must be found.  相似文献   

19.
Ethanol production from lactose byKluyveromyces fragilis NRRL 665 in monoculture and coculture with strains ofZymomonas mobilis was studied. One of the strains,Z. mobilis NRRL 1960, when cocultured withK. fragilis, produed 55.2 g/l of ethanol, whereasK. fragilis in monoculture procuded only 36 g/l ethanol from 200 g/l lactose medium. Increased Qp (g ethanol produced/g biomass/h) and Qs (g substrate consumed/g biomass/h) were observed in coculture than in monoculture. However, the residual sugar concentration increased in coculture; this increase might be due to the slow utilization rate of galactose.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Microcalorimetry was used to study the energetic aerobic growth of Cellulomonas sp. 21399 on glucose, cellobiose and amorphous and crystalline cellulose. The thermochemical aspect of growth on glucose was established with regard to the anabolic contribution. The results obtained allowed the use of glucose as a reference substrate for cellulose degradation. The experimental enthalpy change and the maximum catabolic activity, calculated from the maximum power evolved by the culture, were, respectively,-1079 kJ/mol and 0.85 mmol glucose per hour per dry weight of cells. The growth response on amorphous cellulose was equivalent to that demonstrated on glucose. However, on crystalline cellulose media, Cellulomonas sp. 21399 exhibited eight times less power and the quantity of heat evolved during growth showed that 50% of the cellulose was degraded. Quantitative results and the shape of power-time curves achieved indicate that the structural features of cellulose strongly influence its microbial degradability.  相似文献   

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