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Rubratoxin production by penicillium rubrum when grown in a synthetic medium containing different sources of carbon and nitrogen
Authors:C. O. Emeh  E. H. Marth
Affiliation:(1) Department of Food Science and the Food Research Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 53706 Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Abstract:A sterile mineral salts broth was fortified with different additives, inoculated with conidia ofPenicillium rubrum P-13, and incubated quiescently for 14 days or with shaking for 3 to 5 days. Maximal fungal growth and rubratoxin production occurred when the broth contained 20% sucrose. Broth with 10% glucose, 10% fructose, 5% maltose, or 1% asparagine supported formation of substantial amounts of rubratoxin (52.9–78.5 mg/100 ml). When the broth was fortified with glucose plus lysine, arginine aspartic acid, cystine, ammonium citrate, or ammonium phosphate, moderate amounts (27.5–39.5 mg/100 ml) of rubratoxin and mycelium (0.1–1.5 g/100 ml) were produced. Presence in the broth of 5% galactose or starch resulted in accumulation of small amounts (22.2 and 24.6 mg/100 ml, respectively) of rubratoxin and mold tissue (0.70 and 0.5 g/ 100 ml, respectively). Whereas some toxin was recovered from mineral salts broth fortified with lactose or ribose, toxin was not recovered when the mold grew in broth containing mannitol or fumarate. With the exception of gluconate which supported some growth and toxin formation and ethanol which permitted formation of small amounts of toxin, other carbon sources resulted in little or no fungal growth and no toxin formation. Yields of rubratoxin decreased with an increase in amount of agitation or length of incubation ofP. rubrum cultures. Mold growth increased and toxin formation decreased with an increase in volume of culture.
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