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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Sep 1997, 3345-3351, Vol 63, No. 9
MAH Luttik, R Van Spanning, D Schipper, JP Van Dijken and JT Pronk
Growth energetics of the acetic acid bacterium Acetobacter pasteurianus
were studied with aerobic, ethanol-limited chemostat cultures. In these
cultures, production of acetate was negligible. Carbon limitation and
energy limitation were also evident from the observation that biomass
concentrations in the cultures were proportional to the concentration of
ethanol in the reservoir media. Nevertheless, low concentrations of a few
organic metabolites (glycolate, citrate, and mannitol) were detected in
culture supernatants. From a series of chemostat cultures grown at
different dilution rates, the maintenance energy requirements for ethanol
and oxygen were estimated at 4.1 mmol of ethanol (middot) g of
biomass(sup-1) (middot) h(sup-1) and 11.7 mmol of O(inf2) (middot) g of
biomass(sup-1) (middot) h(sup-1), respectively. When biomass yields were
corrected for these maintenance requirements, the Y(infmax) values on
ethanol and oxygen were 13.1 g of biomass (middot) mol of ethanol(sup-1)
and 5.6 g of biomass (middot) mol of O(inf2)(sup-1), respectively. These
biomass yields are very low in comparison with those of other
microorganisms grown under comparable conditions. To investigate whether
the low growth efficiency of A. pasteurianus might be due to a low gain of
metabolic energy from respiratory dissimilation, (symbl)H(sup+)/O
stoichiometries were estimated during acetate oxidation by cell
suspensions. These experiments indicated an (symbl)H(sup+)/O stoichiometry
for acetate oxidation of 1.9 (plusmn) 0.1 mol of H(sup+)/mol of O.
Theoretical calculations of growth energetics showed that this low
(symbl)H(sup+)/O ratio adequately explained the low biomass yield of A.
pasteurianus in ethanol-limited cultures.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
The Low Biomass Yields of the Acetic Acid Bacterium Acetobacter pasteurianus Are Due to a Low Stoichiometry of Respiration-Coupled Proton Translocation
Department of Microbiology and Enzymology, Kluyver Laboratory of Microbiology, Delft University of Technology, 2628 BC Delft, Department of Microbiology, Free University of Amsterdam, 1081 HV Amsterdam, and Gist-brocades NV, 2600 MA Delft, The Netherlands
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