SummaryAn immobilized growing cell system was applied to the continuous L-isoleucine production by Serratia marcescens. In the new immobilized-cell system using the carrageenan gel method, S. rnarcescens cells in the gel required nutrients and oxygen for growth, and the numbers of living cells per milliliter of gel increased to the levels of that of free cells in the liquid medium. This immobilized growing cell system exhibited high and stable activity for isoleucine production under steady-state conditions. Continuous isoleucine production was carried out by feeding the nutrient medium under aeration into a fluidized bed reactor containing the immobilized cells. In the continuous operation, an efficient production was maintained by automatically controlling the pH of the reaction mixture at 7.5. The productivity of isoleucine increased using multibed reactors. In a two-bed reactor system, the effluent Lisoleucine concentration reached 4.5 mum1 at a retention time of 10 hr, and a steady state was maintained for longer than 30 days.
The amounts of extracellular D-alanine accumulated by Corynebacterium fascians ATCC 21950 in a medium containing glycerol as the sole carbon source is increased to almost 12 mg/ml by adding pyruvate to the medium. Cell-free extracts of C. fascians were shown to possess both L-alanine dehydrogenase and alanine racemase activities. These results indicated that a mechanism exists that allows this microorganism to synthesize D-alanine from pyruvate. A study comparing the optical purity of the intracellular alanine and the extracellular alanine suggested that the cell membrane possesses the stereospecific permeability for D-alanine. Thus, it may be concluded that L-alanine is first formed from pyruvate by L-alanine dehydrogenase and then converted to D-alanine by racemase inside the cells. Subsequently, only D-alanine leaks out stereospecifically through the cell membrane, and large amounts of D-alanine accumulate in the extracellular medium.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.