Klebsiella aerogenes harbouring the plasmid pBR322 was grown in continuous culture at various growth rates under glucose, phosphate or ammonia limitation. With tetracycline in the medium, the maximum culture beta-lactamase activity was found at the higher growth rates. When tetracycline was absent,
The regulation of carbohydrate metabolism inKlebsiella aerogenesNCTC 418 organisms, growing in chemostat culture
β Scribed by O. M. Neijssel; D. W. Tempest
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 785 KB
- Volume
- 106
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0302-8933
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β¦ Synopsis
Klebsiella aerogenes NCTC 418 was grown in chemostat cultures (D = 0.17 hr-1; pH 6.8;35 degrees C) that were, successively, carbon-, sulphate-, ammonia-, and phosphate-limited, and which contained as the sole carbon-substrate first glucose, then glycerol, mannitol and lactate. Quantitative analyses of carbon-substrate used and products formed allowed carbon balances to be constructed and direct comparisons to be made of the efficiency of substrate utilzation. With all sixteen cultures, carbon recoveries of better than 90% were obtained. Optimum utilization of the carbon substrate was invariably found with the carbon-limited cultures, the sole products being organisms and carbon dioxide. But the extent to which excess substrate was over-utilized varied markedly with both the nature of the growth-limitation and the identity of the carbon-substrate. In general, sulphate-, ammonia-, and phosphate-limited cultures utilized glycerol more efficiently than mannitol, mannitol better than lactate, and glucose least efficiently. Glucose-containing cultures also synthesized some extracellular polysaccharide. When the carbon source was in excess, a range of acidic compounds generally were excreted. Sulphate-limited cultures, growing on glucose, excreted much pyruvate and acetate, whereas similarly-limited cultures growing on glycerol, mannitol or lactate produced only acetate. Ammonia-limited cultures invariably excreted 2-oxoglutarate and acetate, whereas phosphate-limited cultures produced gluconic acid, 2-ketogluconic acid and acetate, when growing on glucose, but only acetate when growing on mannitol or lactate. From the rates of substrate and oxygen consumption, and the rates of cell synthesis, yield values for both substrate and oxygen were calculated. These showed different trends, but were similar in being highest under carbon-limitation and substantially lower under all other limitations. The physiological significance of these findings, and the probable nature of the regulatory mechanisms underlying "overflow metabolism" are discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Klebsiella aerogenes NCTC418 was cultured anaerobically under glucose-limited conditions in chemostat cultures at various growth rates, ranging from 0.13 h 1 to 0.82 h -1. It was found that the specific uptake rate of glucose varied linearly with the growth rate and that under these conditions gluco
With chemostat cultures of Klebsiella aerogenes growing at a fixed dilution rate, initially under conditions of glucose-limitation, transition to either potassium-limitation or ammonia-limitation was found not to be a steep step function. A wide range of intermediate steady states could be establish