| Literature DB >> 31425576 |
Bruno Labate Vale da Costa1,2, Vijayendran Raghavendran1, Luís Fernando Mercier Franco2, Adriano de Britto Chaves Filho3, Marcos Yukio Yoshinaga3, Sayuri Miyamoto3, Thiago Olitta Basso2, Andreas Karoly Gombert1.
Abstract
We sought to investigate how far the growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae under full anaerobiosis is dependent on the widely used anaerobic growth factors (AGF) ergosterol and oleic acid. A continuous cultivation setup was employed and, even forcing ultrapure N2 gas through an O2 trap upstream of the bioreactor, neither cells from S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D (a lab strain) nor from PE-2 (an industrial strain) washed out after an aerobic-to-anaerobic switch in the absence of AGF. S. cerevisiae PE-2 seemed to cope better than the laboratory strain with this extremely low O2 availability, since it presented higher biomass yield, lower specific rates of glucose consumption and CO2 formation, and higher survival at low pH. Lipid (fatty acid and sterol) composition dramatically altered when cells were grown anaerobically without AGF: saturated fatty acid, squalene and lanosterol contents increased, when compared to either cells grown aerobically or anaerobically with AGF. We concluded that these lipid alterations negatively affect cell viability during exposure to low pH or high ethanol titers. © FEMS 2019.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Saccharomyces cerevisiaezzm321990 ; anaerobic growth factors; anaerobiosis; chemostat cultivation; oxygen
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31425576 DOI: 10.1093/femsyr/foz054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEMS Yeast Res ISSN: 1567-1356 Impact factor: 2.796