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Secretion of heterologous and native proteins, growth and morphology in batch cultures of Aspergillus niger B1-D at varying agitation rates

✍ Scribed by Aporn Wongwicharn; Linda M Harvey; Brian McNeil


Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
124 KB
Volume
74
Category
Article
ISSN
0268-2575

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✦ Synopsis


The in¯uence of bioreactor operational conditions on the micromorphology of batch cultures of Aspergillus niger B1-D, containing a hen egg white lysozome (HEWL) marker protein, was examined using computerised image analysis. Signi®cant differences in micromorphology were observed with increased stirrer speed, with shorter organisms with shorter hyphal elements occurring as agitation speed increased, even though mean tip numbers were similar. This may explain the observed increase in the total extracellular protein, since the ratio of synthetic (tip) to non-synthetic zones became increasingly favourable. HEWL concentrations fell above 500 rpm, probably due to the effects of DOT (dissolved oxygen tension) on the glucoamylase HEWL fusion. HEWL was susceptible to proteolytic degradation, by native proteases, during the autolytic phase. Such insights may indicate why a gene from one mould expressed in a close relative can give production levels equivalent to levels of native enzymes, while secretion of a gene from a `distant' source, eg a higher eukaryotic gene, occurs at much lower levels.


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Effect of oxygen enrichment on morpholog
✍ Aporn Wongwicharn; Brian McNeil; Linda M. Harvey 📂 Article 📅 1999 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 202 KB 👁 2 views

The response of steady state chemostat cultures of a recombinant Aspergillus niger (B1-D), secreting both a heterologous enzyme (Hen Egg White Lysozyme [HEWL]) and a native enzyme (Glucoamylase), to varying levels of O 2 enrichment of the process gas was evaluated. Formation of both the native and t