Dilution rate as a determinant of mycelial morphology in continuous culture
β Scribed by Marilyn G. Wiebe; Anthony P. J. Trinci
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 597 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The morphology of mycelial fungi in liquid culture affects culture rheology and this in turn may affect product yield. It is therefore important to understand how environmental factors influence mycelial morphology and this paper describes the effect of dilution rate on two strains of Fusarium graminearum, the relatively sparsely branched parental strain (A3/5) and a relatively highly branched "colonial" variant (C106). At any given dilution rate, the concentration of mycelial fragments present at steady state of both strains remained approximately constant with time, suggesting that mycelial fragmentation occurred in a regular manner. However, for both strains fragment concentration decreased with increasing dilution rate. The strains had a similar morphology at a dilution rate of 0.07 h-'. The length of the hyphal growth unit of A315 increased with increase in dilution rate, while that of C106 decreased with increase in dilution rate. At all dilution rates, C106 produced up to ten times more macroconidia than A3/5.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract For production of starch in algal cultures, a growth rate limited by a nutrient is an important factor. Under phototrophic conditions, turbidity must be also paid attention, as the shading effect may affect its productivity. Semiβcontinuous cultivation methods, which enable control of t
Experimental data from six hybridoma cell lines grown under diverse experimental conditions in both normal continuous and perfusion cultures are analyzed with respect to the significance of nutrients and products in determining the growth and death rates of cells and with respect to their mathematic
## Abstract In industrial production of enzymes using the filamentous fungus __Aspergillus niger__ supply of sufficient oxygen is often a limitation, resulting in the formation of byβproducts such as polyols. In order to identify the mechanisms behind formation of the different byβproducts we studi