• Title/Summary/Keyword: cellulose-negative mutant

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Effect of Gluconic Acid on the Production of Cellulose in Acetobacter xylinum BRC5

  • PARK, SANG TAE;TAEKSUN SONG;YOUNG MIN KIM
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.9 no.5
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    • pp.683-686
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    • 1999
  • Four mutants of Acetobacter xylinum BRC5 defective in gluconic acid production were isolated from UV-irradiated cells. The gluconic acid-negative mutants did not show glucose oxidase activity. The mutants were also defective in cellulose production. A randomly selected mutant grown in the Hestrin-Schramm medium (pH 6.0) supplemented with gluconic acid, however, was found to synthesize cellulose. The mutant grown in Hestrin-Schramm medium whose pH was adjusted to 5.0 with HC1 and contained no gluconic acid also produced cellulose. Wild-type cells grown under the same condition synthesized cellulose more rapidly than those grown in the pH 6.0 medium.

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Effects of Mixing Conditions on the Production of Microbial Cellulose by Acetobacter xylinum

  • Lee, Hei-Chan;Xia Zhao
    • Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering:BBE
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.41-45
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    • 1999
  • Microbial cellulose has many potential applications due to its excellent physical properties. The production of cellulose from Acetobacter xylinum in submerged culture is, however, beset with numerous problems. The most difficult one has been the appearance of negative mutants under shaking culture conditions, which is deficient of cellulose producing ability. Thus genetic instability of Acetobacter xylinum under shaking culture condition made developing a stable mutant major research interest in recent years. To find a proper type of bioreactor for the production of microbial cellulose, several production systems were developed. Using a reactor system with planar type impeller with bottoms sparging system, it was possible to produce 5 g/L microbial cellulose without generating cellulose minus mutants, which is comparable to that of static culture system.

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Selection of a Mutant Strain with High Yield of Cellulose Production Derived from $Acetobacter$ sp. A9 ($Acetobacter$ sp. A9에서 셀룰로오스 생산량이 높은 변이주 선별)

  • Lee, O-Mi;Son, Hong-Joo;Lee, Sang-Joon
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.321-325
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    • 2011
  • The mutant strain M6 derived from Acetobacter sp. A9, which produces high levels of the bacterial cellulose derived by random mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine or UV treatment, was selected by a Hestrin and Schramm medium (HSB) plate assay. The characterization of the cellulose production was studied in flask culture to improve the productivity of bacterial cellulose by $Acetobacter$ sp. A9 and mutant strain M6. The yield of cellulose production was superior to mutant M6 than $Acetobacter$ sp. A9. Cellulose was produced 0.12 g $L^{-1}$ by $Acetobacter$ sp. A9 at HS medium and the mutant M6 produced the cellulose 6.95 g $L^{-1}$at HS medium. Strain M6 produced less amount of gluconic acid than A9, thus showing that cellulose production is negatively relted with the gluconic acid production.

Conversion of G. hansenii PJK into Non-cellulose-producing Mutants According to the Culture Condition

  • Park, Joong-Kon;Hyun, Seung-Hun;Jung, Jae-Yong
    • Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering:BBE
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    • v.9 no.5
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    • pp.383-388
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    • 2004
  • The conversion of a cellulose-producing cell ($Cel^+$) from Gluconacetobacter hansenii PJK (KCTC 10505 BP) to a non-cellulose-producing cell ($Cel^-$) was investigated by measuring the colony forming unit (CFU). This was achieved in a shaking flask with three slanted baffles, which exerted a strong shear stress. The addition of organic acid, such as glutamic acid and acetic acid, induced the conversion of microbial cells from a wild type to $Cel^-$ mutants in a flask culture. The supplementation of $1\%$ ethanol to the medium containing an organic acid depressed the con-version of the microbial cells to $Cel^-$ mutants in a conventional flask without slanted baffles. The addition of ethanol to the medium containing an organic acid; however, accelerated the conversion of microbial cells in the flask with slanted baffles. The $Cel^+$ cells from the agitated culture were not easily converted into $Cel^-$ mutants on the additions of organic acid and ethanol to a flask without Slanted baffles, but some portion of the $Cel^+$ cells were converted to $Cel^-$ mutants in a flask with slanted baffles. The conversion ratio of $Cel^+$ cells to $Cel^-$ mutants was strongly re-lated to the production of bacterial cellulose independently from the cell growth.

Fibrobacter succinogenes, a Dominant Fibrolytic Ruminal Bacterium: Transition to the Post Genomic Era

  • Jun, H.S.;Qi, M.;Ha, J.K.;Forsberg, C.W.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.20 no.5
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    • pp.802-810
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    • 2007
  • Fibrobacter succinogenes, a Gram-negative, anaerobic ruminal bacterium is a major fibre digesting species in the rumen. It intensively degrades plant cell walls by an erosion type of mechanism, burrowing its way through the complex matrix of cellulose and hemicellulose with the release of digestible and undigested cell wall fragments. The enzymes involved in this process include a combination of glucanases, xylanases, arabinofuranosidase(s) and esterases. The genome of the bacterium has been sequenced and this has revealed in excess of 100 putative glycosyl hydrolase, pectate lyase and carbohydrate esterase genes, which is greater than the numbers reported present in other major cellulolytic organisms for which genomes have been sequenced. Modelling of the amino acid sequences of two glycanases, CedA and EGB, by reference to crystallized homologs has enabled prediction of the major features of their tertiary structures. Two dimensional gel electrophoresis in conjunction with mass spectroscopy has permitted the documentation of proteins over expressed in F. succinogenes grown on cellulose, and analysis of the cell surfaces of mutant strains unable to bind to cellulose has enabled the identification of candidate proteins with roles in adhesion to the plant cell wall substrate, the precursor to cellulose biodegradation.