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1.
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   

2.
《Journal of biotechnology》1999,67(2-3):159-171
Xylitol production from xylose was studied using recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae 2805 containing xylose reductase genes (XYL1) of Pichia stipitis at chromosomal δ-sequences. S. cerevisiae 2805-39-40, which contains about 40 copies of the XYL1 gene on the chromosome, was obtained by a sequential transformation using a dominant selection marker neor and an auxotrophic marker URA3. The multiple XYL1 genes were stably maintained on the chromosome even after 21 and 10 days in the non-selective sequential batch and chemostat cultures, respectively, whereas S. cerevisiae 2805:pVTXR, which harbors the episomal plasmid pVTXR having the XYL1 gene, showed mitotic plasmid instability and more than 95% of the cells lost the plasmid under the same culture conditions. In the first batch (3 days) of the sequential batch culture, volumetric xylitol productivity was 0.18 g l−1 h−1 for S. cerevisiae 2805-39-40, as compared to 0.21 g l−1 h−1 for S. cerevisiae 2805:pVTXR. However, the xylitol productivity of the latter started to decrease rapidly in the third batch and dropped to 0.04 g l−1 h−1 in the seventh batch, whereas the former maintained the stable xylitol productivity at 0.18 g l−1 h−1 through the entire sequential batch culture. The xylitol production level in the chemostat culture was about 8 g l−1 for S. cerevisiae 2805-39-40, as compared to 2.0 g l−1 for S. cerevisiae 2805:pVTXR after 10 days of cultures even though the xylitol production level of the latter was higher than that of the former for the first 5 days. The results of this experiment indicate that S. cerevisiae containing the multiple XYL1 genes on the chromosome is much more efficient for the xylitol production in the long-term non-selective culture than S. cerevisiae harboring the episomal plasmid containing the XYL1 gene.  相似文献   

3.
Xylitol production by Pichia stipitis FPL-YS30, a xyl3-1 mutant that metabolizes xylose using an alternative metabolic pathway, was investigated under aerobic and oxygen-limited culture conditions. Under both culture conditions, FPL-YS30 (xyl3-1) produced a negligible amount of ethanol and converted xylose mainly into xylitol with comparable yields (0.30 and 0.27 g xylitol/g xylose). However, xylose consumption increased five-fold under aerobic compared to oxygen-limited conditions. This suggests that the efficiency of the alternative route of xylose assimilation is affected by respiration. As a result, the FPL-YS30 strain produced 26 g/l of xylitol, and exhibited a higher volumetric productivity (0.22 g xylitol l–1 h–1) under aerobic conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Aims: To characterize the kinetics of growth, sugar uptake and xylitol production in batch and fed‐batch cultures for a xylitol assimilation‐deficient strain of Candida tropicalis isolated via chemical mutagenesis. Methods and Results: Chemical mutagenesis using nitrosoguanidine led to the isolation of the xylitol‐assimilation deficient strain C. tropicalis SS2. Shake‐flask fermentations with this mutant showed a sixfold higher xylitol yield than the parent strain in medium containing 25 g l?1 glucose and 25 g l?1 xylose. With 20 g l?1 glycerol, replacing glucose for cell growth, and various concentrations of xylose, the studies indicated that the mutant strain resulted in xylitol yields from xylose close to theoretical. Under fully aerobic conditions, fed‐batch fermentation with repeated addition of glycerol and xylose resulted in 3·3 g l?1 h?1 xylitol volumetric productivity with the final concentration of 220 g l?1 and overall yield of 0·93 g g?1 xylitol. Conclusions: The xylitol assimilation‐deficient mutant isolated in this study showed the potential for high xylitol yield and volumetric productivity under aerobic conditions. In the evaluation of glycerol as an alternative low‐cost nonfermentable carbon source, high biomass and xylitol yields under aerobic conditions were achieved; however, the increase in initial xylose concentrations resulted in a reduction in biomass yield based on glycerol consumption. This may be a consequence of the role of an active transport system in the yeast requiring increasing energy for xylose uptake and possible xylitol secretion, with little or no energy available from xylose metabolism. Significance and Impact of the Study: The study confirms the advantage of using a xylitol assimilation‐deficient yeast under aerobic conditions for xylitol production with glycerol as a primary carbon source. It illustrates the potential of using the xylose stream in a biomass‐based bio‐refinery for the production of xylitol with further cost reductions resulting from using glycerol for yeast growth and energy production.  相似文献   

5.
In a study of the control of metabolite formation, prodigiosin production by Serratia marcescens was used as a model. Specific production rates of prodigiosin formation were determined using batch culture technique. Sucrose as carbon source and NH4NO3 as nitrogen source resulted in a specific production rate of 0.476 mg prodigiosin (g cell dry weight)−1 h−1. Prodigiosin formation and productivity was inversely correlated to growth rate when the bacterium was grown under carbon limitation on a defined medium in a chemostat culture. The maximum specific growth rate (μmax) was 0.54 h−1 and prodigiosin was formed in amounts over 1 mg l−1 up to a growth rate (μ) of 0.3 h−1 at steady state conditions. At a dilution rate of 0.1 h−1 growth at steady state with carbon and phosphate limitation supported prodigiosin formation giving a similar specific yield [1.17 mg prodigiosin (g cell dry weight)−1 and 0.94 mg g−1, respectively], however, cells grown with nitrogen limitation [(NH4)2SO4] did not form prodigiosin. Productivity in batch culture was 1.33 mg l−1 h−1 as compared to 0.57 mg l−1 h−1 in the chemostat.  相似文献   

6.
Fourteen assays were conducted to study the influence of different variables, namely xylose concentration, inoculum level, agitation speed and nutrient supplementation, on xylitol biosynthesis by Candida guilliermondii FTI 20037. The maximum predicted values for xylitol yield (0.65 g g–1) and xylitol productivity (0.66 g l–1 h–1) can be attained with rice straw hydrolysate containing 60 g xylose l–1 without supplementation of ammonium sulfate, calcium chloride and rice bran extract, using 5 g inoculum l–1, at 250 rpm. Xylose concentration and inoculum level were selected for further optimization studies.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Conversion of D‐xylose to xylitol by Candida boidinii NRRL Y‐17213 was studied under anaerobic and oxygen limited conditions by varying the oxygen transfer coefficient kLa. Shake flask experiments were used to provide the preliminary information required to perform experiments in a bioreactor. The yeast did not grow under fully anaerobic conditions, but anaerobic formations of xylitol, ethanol, ribitol, and glycerol were observed as well as D‐xylose assimilation of 11 %. In shake flasks, with an initial D‐xylose concentration of 50 g/L, an increase in kLa from 8 to 46 h–1 resulted in a faster growth, higher rate of substrate uptake and lower yields of products. The highest xylitol productivity (0.052 g/L h) was attained at kLa = 8 h–1. At kLa = 46 h–1, 98.6 % of D‐xylose was consumed and mainly converted to biomass. Using 130 g/L D‐xylose, kLa was varied in the fermenter from 26 to 78 h–1. The percentage of consumed D‐xylose increased from 31 % at kLa = 26 h–1 to 93–94 % at all other aeration levels. Biomass yield increased with kLa, whereas ethanol, ribitol, and glycerol yields exhibited an opposite dependence on the oxygenation level. The most favorable oxygen transfer coefficient for xylitol formation, in the fermenter, was kLa = 47 h–1 when its concentration (57.5 g/L) surpassed ethanol accumulation by 3.6‐fold, and the glycerol plus ribitol by 10‐fold. Concurrently, xylitol yield and productivity reached 0.45 g/g and 0.26 g/L h, respectively. The volumetric xylitol productivity was affected more by changes in the aeration than the corresponding yield.  相似文献   

9.
Carbon distribution and kinetics of Candida shehatae were studied in fed-batch fermentation with xylose or glucose (separately) as the carbon source in mineral medium. The fermentations were carried out in two phases, an aerobic phase dedicated to growth followed by an oxygen limitation phase dedicated to ethanol production. Oxygen limitation was quantified with an average specific oxygen uptake rate (OUR) varying between 0.30 and 2.48 mmolO2 g dry cell weight (DCW)?1 h?1, the maximum value before the aerobic shift. The relations among respiration, growth, ethanol production and polyol production were investigated. It appeared that ethanol was produced to provide energy, and polyols (arabitol, ribitol, glycerol and xylitol) were produced to reoxidize NADH from assimilatory reactions and from the co-factor imbalance of the two-first enzymatic steps of xylose uptake. Hence, to manage carbon flux to ethanol production, oxygen limitation was a major controlled parameter; an oxygen limitation corresponding to an average specific OUR of 1.19 mmolO2 g DCW?1 h?1 allowed maximization of the ethanol yield over xylose (0.327 g g?1), the average productivity (2.2 g l?1 h?1) and the ethanol final titer (48.81 g l?1). For glucose fermentation, the ethanol yield over glucose was the highest (0.411 g g?1) when the specific OUR was low, corresponding to an average specific OUR of 0.30 mmolO2 g DCW?1 h?1, whereas the average ethanol productivity and ethanol final titer reached the maximum values of 1.81 g l?1 h?1 and 54.19 g l?1 when the specific OUR was the highest.  相似文献   

10.

Background

Ethanolic fermentation of lignocellulosic biomass is a sustainable option for the production of bioethanol. This process would greatly benefit from recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains also able to ferment, besides the hexose sugar fraction, the pentose sugars, arabinose and xylose. Different pathways can be introduced in S. cerevisiae to provide arabinose and xylose utilisation. In this study, the bacterial arabinose isomerase pathway was combined with two different xylose utilisation pathways: the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase and xylose isomerase pathways, respectively, in genetically identical strains. The strains were compared with respect to aerobic growth in arabinose and xylose batch culture and in anaerobic batch fermentation of a mixture of glucose, arabinose and xylose.

Results

The specific aerobic arabinose growth rate was identical, 0.03 h-1, for the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase and xylose isomerase strain. The xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase strain displayed higher aerobic growth rate on xylose, 0.14 h-1, and higher specific xylose consumption rate in anaerobic batch fermentation, 0.09 g (g cells)-1 h-1 than the xylose isomerase strain, which only reached 0.03 h-1 and 0.02 g (g cells)-1h-1, respectively. Whereas the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase strain produced higher ethanol yield on total sugars, 0.23 g g-1 compared with 0.18 g g-1 for the xylose isomerase strain, the xylose isomerase strain achieved higher ethanol yield on consumed sugars, 0.41 g g-1 compared with 0.32 g g-1 for the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase strain. Anaerobic fermentation of a mixture of glucose, arabinose and xylose resulted in higher final ethanol concentration, 14.7 g l-1 for the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase strain compared with 11.8 g l-1 for the xylose isomerase strain, and in higher specific ethanol productivity, 0.024 g (g cells)-1 h-1 compared with 0.01 g (g cells)-1 h-1 for the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase strain and the xylose isomerase strain, respectively.

Conclusion

The combination of the xylose reductase/xylitol dehydrogenase pathway and the bacterial arabinose isomerase pathway resulted in both higher pentose sugar uptake and higher overall ethanol production than the combination of the xylose isomerase pathway and the bacterial arabinose isomerase pathway. Moreover, the flux through the bacterial arabinose pathway did not increase when combined with the xylose isomerase pathway. This suggests that the low activity of the bacterial arabinose pathway cannot be ascribed to arabitol formation via the xylose reductase enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Wild-type Corynebacterium glutamicum produced 0.6 g l−1 xylitol from xylose at a productivity of 0.01 g l−1 h−1 under oxygen deprivation. To increase this productivity, the pentose transporter gene (araE) from C. glutamicum ATCC31831 was integrated into the C. glutamicum R chromosome. Consequent disruption of its lactate dehydrogenase gene (ldhA), and expression of single-site mutant xylose reductase from Candida tenuis (CtXR (K274R)) resulted in recombinant C. glutamicum strain CtXR4 that produced 26.5 g l−1 xylitol at 3.1 g l−1 h−1. To eliminate possible formation of toxic intracellular xylitol phosphate, genes encoding xylulokinase (XylB) and phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent fructose phosphotransferase (PTSfru) were disrupted to yield strain CtXR7. The productivity of strain CtXR7 increased 1.6-fold over that of strain CtXR4. A fed-batch 21-h CtXR7 culture in mineral salts medium under oxygen deprivation yielded 166 g l−1 xylitol at 7.9 g l−1 h−1, representing the highest bacterial xylitol productivity reported to date.  相似文献   

12.
Exorbitant outputs of waste xylose mother liquor (WXML) and corncob residue from commercial-scale production of xylitol create environmental problems. To reduce the wastes, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain tolerant to WXML was conferred with abilities to express the genes of xylose reductase, a xylose-specific transporter and enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway. This strain showed a high capacity to produce xylitol from xylose in WXML with glucose as a co-substrate. Additionally, a simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) process was designed to use corncob residues and cellulase instead of directly adding glucose as a co-substrate. Xylitol titer and the productivity were, respectively, 91.0 g l-1 and 1.26 ± 0.01 g l-1 h-1 using 20% WXML, 55 g DCW l-1 delignified corncob residues and 11.8 FPU gcellulose-1 cellulase at 35° during fermentation. This work demonstrates the promising strategy of SSF to exploit waste products to xylitol fermentation process.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of changing growth rate and oxygen transfer rate (OTR) on Debaryomyces hansenii physiology was studied using xylose-limited and oxygen-limited chemostat cultures, respectively, and complemented with enzymatic assays. Under xylose-limited chemostat (oxygen-excess), neither ethanol nor xylitol was produced over the entire range of dilution rate (D). The maximal volumetric biomass productivity was 2.5 g l–1 h–1 at D =0.25 h–1 and cell yield was constant at all values of D. The respiratory rates and xylose consumption rate increased linearly with growth rate but, above 0.17 h–1, oxygen consumption rate had a steeper increase compared to carbon dioxide production rate. Enzymatic analysis of xylose metabolism suggests that internal fluxes are redirected as a function of growth rate. For values of D up to 0.17 h–1, the xylose reductase (XR) titre is lower than the xylitol dehydrogenase (XDH) titre, whereas above 0.17 h–1 XR activity is about twice that of XDH and the NADPH-producing enzymes sharply increase their titres indicating an internal metabolic flux shift to meet higher NADPH metabolic requirements. Moreover, the enzymes around the pyruvate node also exhibited different patterns if D was above or below 0.17 h–1. Under oxygen-limited chemostat (xylose-excess) the metabolism changed drastically and, due to oxidative phosphorylation limitation, cell yield decreased to 0.16 g g–1 for an OTR of 1.4 mmol l–1 h–1 and xylitol became the major extracellular product along with minor amounts of glycerol. The enzymatic analysis revealed that isocitrate dehydrogenase is not regulated by oxygen, whereas XR, XDH and the NADPH-producing enzymes changed their levels according to oxygen availability. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

14.
Effect of Oxygenation on Xylose Fermentation by Pichia stipitis   总被引:3,自引:5,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The effect of oxygen limitation on xylose fermentation by Pichia stipitis (CBS 6054) was investigated in continuous culture. The maximum specific ethanol productivity (0.20 g of ethanol g dry weight−1 h−1) and ethanol yield (0.48 g/g) was reached at an oxygen transfer rate below 1 mmol/liter per h. In the studied range of oxygenation, the xylose reductase (EC 1.1.1.21) and xylitol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.9) activities were constant as well as the ratio between the NADPH and NADH activities of xylose reductase. No xylitol production was found. The pyruvate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.1) activity increased and the malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) activity decreased with decreasing oxygenation. With decreasing oxygenation, the intracellular intermediary metabolites sedoheptulose 7-phosphate, glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate, and malate accumulated slightly while pyruvate decreased. The ratio of the xylose uptake rate under aerobic conditions, in contrast to that under anaerobic assay conditions, increased with increasing oxygenation in the culture. The results are discussed in relation to the energy level in the cell, the redox balance, and the mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

15.
Previously, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain was engineered for xylose assimilation by the constitutive overexpression of the Orpinomyces xylose isomerase, the S. cerevisiae xylulokinase, and the Pichia stipitis SUT1 sugar transporter genes. The recombinant strain exhibited growth on xylose, under aerobic conditions, with a specific growth rate of 0.025 h−1, while ethanol production from xylose was achieved anaerobically. In the present study, the developed recombinant yeast was adapted for enhanced growth on xylose by serial transfer in xylose-containing minimal medium under aerobic conditions. After repeated batch cultivations, a strain was isolated which grew with a specific growth rate of 0.133 h−1. The adapted strain could ferment 20 g l−1 of xylose to ethanol with a yield of 0.37 g g−1 and production rate of 0.026 g l−1 h−1. Raising the fermentation temperature from 30°C to 35°C resulted in a substantial increase in the ethanol yield (0.43 g g−1) and production rate (0.07 g l−1 h−1) as well as a significant reduction in the xylitol yield. By the addition of a sugar complexing agent, such as sodium tetraborate, significant improvement in ethanol production and reduction in xylitol accumulation was achieved. Furthermore, ethanol production from xylose and a mixture of glucose and xylose was also demonstrated in complex medium containing yeast extract, peptone, and borate with a considerably high yield of 0.48 g g−1.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of nutrient supplementation of brewery’s spent grain (BSG) hydrolysates was evaluated with respect to biomass and xylitol production by Debaryomyces hansenii. For optimal biomass production, supplementation of full-strength BSG hydrolysates required only phosphate (0.5 g l−1 KH2PO4), leading to a biomass yield and productivity of 0.60 g g−1 monosaccharides and 0.55 g l−1 h−1, respectively. Under the conditions studied, no metabolic products other than CO2 and biomass were identified. For xylitol production, fourfold and sixfold concentrated hydrolysate-based media were used to assess the supplementation effects. The type of nutrient supplementation modulated the ratio of total polyols/total extracellular metabolites as well as the xylitol/arabitol ratio. While the former varied from 0.8 to 1, the xylitol/arabitol ratio reached a maximum value of 2.6 for yeast extract (YE)-supplemented hydrolysates. The increase in xylitol productivity and yield was related to the increase of the percentage of consumed xylose induced by supplementation. The best xylitol yield and productivity were found for YE supplementation corresponding to 0.55 g g−1 and 0.36 g l−1 h−1, respectively. In sixfold concentrated hydrolysates, providing that the hydrolysate was supplemented, the levels of xylitol produced were similar or higher than those for arabitol. Xylitol yield exhibited a further increase in the sixfold hydrolysate supplemented with trace elements, vitamins and minerals to 0.65 g g−1, albeit the xylitol productivity was somewhat lower. The effect of using activated charcoal detoxification in non-supplemented versus supplemented sixfold hydrolysates was also studied. Detoxification did not improve polyols formation, suggesting that the hemicellulose-derived inhibitor levels present in concentrated BSG hydrolysates are well tolerated by D. hansenii.  相似文献   

17.
Xylitol was produced a in two-substrate, batch fermentation with cell recycling of Candida tropicalis ATCC 13803. A series of cell-recycle experiments showed that the feeding of xylose, glucose and yeast extract in the xylitol production phase was most effective in enhancing xylitol productivity. The optimized cell recycle fermentation resulted in 0.82 g xylitol/g xylose yield, 4.94 g xylitol l–1 h–1 productivity, and final xylitol concentration of 189 g l–1. These results were 1.3 times higher in volumetric xylitol productivity and 2.2 times higher in final product concentration compared with the corresponding values of the optimized two-substrate batch culture.  相似文献   

18.
Xylitol formation by Candida boidinii in oxygen limited chemostat culture   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Production of xylitol by Candida boidinii NRRL Y-17213 occurs under conditions of an oxygen limitation. The extent to which substrate is converted to xylitol and its coproducts (ethanol, other polyols, acetic acid), and the relative flow rates of substrate to energetic and biosynthetic pathways is controlled by the degree of oxygen limitation.With decrease in oxygen concentration in the inlet gas, for a constant dilution rate of 0.05 1/h. the specific oxygen uptake rate decreased from 1.30 to 0.36 mmol/gh Xylitol was not produced at specific oxygen uptake rates above 0.91 mmol/gh. Upon shift to lower oxygen rates, specific xylitol production rate increased more rapidly than specific ethanol production rate:Nomenclature D dilution rate (1/h) - DOT dissolved oxygen tension (%) - mo2 maintenance coefficient (mmol O2/g cell mass h) - qo2 specific oxygen uptake rate (mmol O2/g cell mass h) - qs specific xylose uptake rate (g xylose/g cell mass h) or (mmol xylose/g cell mass h) - qx specific xylitol production rate (g xylitol/ g cell mass h) or (mmol xylitol/ g cell mass h) - qe specific ethanol production rate (g ethanol/ g cell mass h) or (mmol ethanol/ g cell mass h) - qCO2 specific carbon dioxide production rate (mmol CO2/g cell mass h) - S xylose concentration (g/1) - Ycm/s cell mass yield coefficient, (g cell mass/mmol xylose) or (g cell mass/ g xylose consumed) - Ycm/O2 cell mass yield coefficient, (g cell mass/mmol O2) - YX/S xylitol yield coefficient (g xylitol/g xylose consumed) - Yx/O2 xylitol yield coefficient (g xylitol/mmol O2) - Ye/s ethanol yield coefficient (g ethanol/g xylose consumed) - OUR oxygen uptake rate (mmol O2/1h) - specific growth rate (1/h)  相似文献   

19.
The production of xylitol by the yeast Candida guilliermondii was investigated in batch fermentations with aspenwood hemicellulose hydrolysate and compared with results obtained in semi-defined media with a mixture of glucose and xylose. The hemicellulose hydrolysate had to be supplemented by yeast extract and the maximum xylitol yield (0.8 g g–1) and productivity (0.6 g l–1 h–1) were reached by controlling oxygen input.  相似文献   

20.
Ko BS  Rhee CH  Kim JH 《Biotechnology letters》2006,28(15):1159-1162
The effects of glycerol and the oxygen transfer rate on the xylitol production rate by a xylitol dehydrogenase gene (XYL2)-disrupted mutant of Candida tropicalis were investigated. The mutant produced xylitol near the almost yield of 100% from d-xylose using glycerol as a co-substrate for cell growth and NADPH regeneration: 50 g d-xylose l−1 was completely converted into xylitol when at least 20 g glycerol l−1 was used as a co-substrate. The xylitol production rate increased with the O2 transfer rate until saturation and it was not necessary to control the dissolved O2 tension precisely. Under the optimum conditions, the volumetric productivity and xylitol yield were 3.2 g l−1 h−1 and 97% (w/w), respectively.  相似文献   

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