| Literature DB >> 25888907 |
Simon Unthan1, Andreas Radek2, Wolfgang Wiechert3, Marco Oldiges4, Stephan Noack5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The throughput of cultivation experiments in bioprocess development has drastically increased in recent years due to the availability of sophisticated microliter scale cultivation devices. However, as these devices still require time-consuming manual work, the bottleneck was merely shifted to media preparation, inoculation and finally the analyses of cultivation samples. A first step towards solving these issues was undertaken in our former study by embedding a BioLector in a robotic workstation. This workstation already allowed for the optimization of heterologous protein production processes, but remained limited when aiming for the characterization of small molecule producer strains. In this work, we extended our workstation to a versatile Mini Pilot Plant (MPP) by integrating further robotic workflows and microtiter plate assays that now enable a fast and accurate phenotyping of a broad range of microbial production hosts.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25888907 PMCID: PMC4361198 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-015-0216-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Figure 1Fully automated workflow to harvest cell-free cultivation samples from microtiter plate cultivations on the MPP. A: Steps of the automated harvest operation to generate a variable number (1 - 48) of cell-free supernatants in parallel from BioLector cultivations. B: Triggered process to sample supernatants after turn to stationary phase to compare different producer strains considering final product titers. C: Time-dependent harvest profile of identically inoculated parallel cultivations to assess metabolite formation or uptake kinetics.
Figure 2Development and validation of metabolite quantification in microtiter plate scale on the MPP. A-C: Fast photometric quantification of amino acids was realized by the application of the developed Ninhydrin assay in 384-well microtiter plates. The assay was tested with regard to the measurable metabolite spectrum as well as its selectivity against relevant by-products and media components of the model host C. glutamicum. D-E: Enzymatic assays to quantify D-glucose or D-xylose in culture supernatants were automated in 384-well microtiter plates.
Figure 3Screening of a strain library on the MPP and scale-up of the best performer in lab-scale bioreactors. A: Determination of maximum growth rate and total amino acid titer of a set of genome reduced L-lysine producers (GRLP) using the developed harvest procedure in combination with the Ninhydrin assay (n ≥ 4 biological replicates, cf. Figure 1B and 2C). Strains with significant changes in either parameter compared to the model L-lysine producer DM1933 were determined by one-way ANOVA (p < 0.01) and marked with an asterisk. GRLP45 showed highly elevated amino acid titers in BioLector cultivations while displaying a decreased maximum growth rate. B: Both observations for GRLP45 obtained on the MPP were confirmed in 1 l lab-scale bioreactor experiments (n = 3 biological replicates). Amino acids and L-lysine were quantified in one cultivation run of GRLP45 and DM1933, respectively, using the automated Ninhydrin assay as well as an established LC-MS/MS protocol (n = 3 technical replicates).
Figure 4Substrate uptake characteristics of during growth on CGXII medium with D-glucose and D-xylose. The cultivation was performed in 46 identically inoculated wells of a FlowerPlate, of which each well was harvested automatically following a time-dependent pattern (cf. Figure 1C). Supernatant samples were automatically clarified via centrifugation, stored at −4°C and subsequently analyzed for D-glucose and D-xylose concentrations (n = 3 technical replicates). The results of both enzymatic substrate quantification methods were confirmed with established HPLC protocols. Mean values for backscatter and dissolved oxygen were estimated from unsampled replicate cultures (n ≥ 3). Confidence intervals (shaded areas) were spanned from the minimum and maximum value at each measurement point.