Publication | Open Access
Comparison of growth, acetate production, and acetate inhibition of Escherichia coli strains in batch and fed-batch fermentations
594
Citations
23
References
1990
Year
EngineeringMicrobial PhysiologyBioenergeticsBiochemical EngineeringBioprocess MonitoringMetabolic EngineeringMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyEscherichia Coli StrainsSodium AcetateAcetate InhibitionFood FermentationBiochemistryAcetate ProductionAcetic AcidBiotechnologyFood BioprocessingMicrobiologyMedicineFed-batch Fermentations
The study compared growth and acetate production of multiple E. coli strains in shake flasks, batch, and fed‑batch fermentations to evaluate their capacity for high‑density growth. The authors derived a model explaining how acetate inhibits E.
The growth characteristics and acetate production of several Escherichia coli strains were compared by using shake flasks, batch fermentations, and glucose-feedback-controlled fed-batch fermentations to assess the potential of each strain to grow at high cell densities. Of the E. coli strains tested, including JM105, B, W3110, W3100, HB101, DH1, CSH50, MC1060, JRG1046, and JRG1061, strains JM105 and B were found to have the greatest relative biomass accumulation, strain MC1060 accumulated the highest concentrations of acetic acid, and strain B had the highest growth rates under the conditions tested. In glucose-feedback-controlled fed-batch fermentations, strains B and JM105 produced only 2 g of acetate.liter-1 while accumulating up to 30 g of biomass.liter-1. Under identical conditions, strains HB101 and MC1060 accumulated less than 10 g of biomass.liter-1 and strain MC1060 produced 8 g of acetate.liter-1. The addition of various concentrations of sodium acetate to the growth medium resulted in a logarithmic decrease, with respect to acetate concentration, in the growth rates of E. coli JM105, JM105(pOS4201), and JRG1061. These data indicated that the growth of the E. coli strains was likely to be inhibited by the acetate they produced when grown on media containing glucose. A model for the inhibition of growth of E. coli by acetate was derived from these experiments to explain the inhibition of acetate on E. coli strains at neutral pH.
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