| Literature DB >> 29530017 |
Boris Zacchetti1, Agathoklis Andrianos, Dino van Dissel1, Evelien de Ruiter1, Gilles P van Wezel1, Dennis Claessen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Filamentous bacteria of the genus Streptomyces produce a large arsenal of industrially relevant antibiotics and enzymes. The industrial production of these molecules occurs in large fermenters, where many streptomycetes form dense mycelial networks called pellets. Pellets are characterized by slow growth and inefficient nutrient transfer and therefore regarded as undesirable from the perspective of productivity. Although non-pelleting strains have increased growth rates, their morphology also leads to a dramatic increase in the viscosity of the culture broth, which negatively impacts the process dynamics.Entities:
Keywords: Enzyme production; Microencapsulation; Streptomyces
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29530017 PMCID: PMC5848461 DOI: 10.1186/s12896-018-0425-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Fig. 1Morphology of encapsulated streptomycetes in NMMPmod medium. Microscopy images of microcapsules of Streptomyces coelicolor, Streptomyces lividans, Streptomyces venezuelae and Streptomyces griseus grown in NMMPmod medium at 48 (top panel) and 96 h (lower panel). The scale bar corresponds to 200 μm
Fig. 2Microencapsulation reduces mycelial damage. LIVE/DEAD staining of S. lividans grown in microcapsules (top row), or non-encapsulated in the absence (middle row) or presence (bottom row) of a metal coil. Mycelium stained with Syto9 (green) represents viable mycelium, while propidium iodide-stained mycelium (red) is damaged. Whereas abundant viable mycelium is visible in the encapsulated state at 48 h of growth, the non-encapsulated mycelium appears highly damaged. Note that the mycelium grown in the presence of the coil appears already damaged after 36 h. The scale bar represents 200 μm (top panel) or 100 μm (middle and bottom panel)
Fig. 3Microencapsulation increases tyrosinase activity in the supernatant. Lines represent the tyrosinase activity present in the supernatant of S. lividans pIJ703 grown encapsulated (green), or non-encapsulated in the absence (red) or presence (blue) of a coil. The highest activity was observed in the culture broth of the encapsulated mycelium after 48 h of growth
Fig. 4Microencapsulation increases tyrosinase purity in the culture broth. a SDS-page showing the protein profiles in the supernatants of cultures of S. lividans pIJ703, grown encapsulated (lanes 2–4), or non-encapsulated in the absence (lanes 5–7) and presence (lanes 8–10) of a metal coil. All cultures were performed in triplicate. Molecular weight markers (lane 1) are indicated in kDa. b Western analysis of the abovementioned supernatants using an anti-Tyrosinase antibody. Molecular weight markers are indicated in kDa