SUMMARY:Freshly isolated and old stock strains of Streptococcus bovis originating from the rumen will produce dextran a t 3 7 ' in liquid sucrose-containing media. For * good yields the presence of CO, in some form is necessary. The CO, may be provided as HCOC at the start or during the life of the culture or by incubation in a CO, atmosphere. The dextran has [a]? + 18'7' to + 190" and is similar chemically to the leuconostoc dextran save that branching of the a1 3 6 linked anhydro-glucose chain is rarer. With some strains practically no dextran is formed in H, as gas-phase or in a closed system without HCO; from which air is excluded. Other strains seem to have a limited power of producing dextran under these conditions, possibly because their action is not entirely homofermentative. Tween 80 will partially replace CO, even with the first kind of strain. Highest yields of dextran, up to 80% of the anhydroglucose provided, are obtained when the life of the culture is prolonged by repeated neutralization and when additional sucrose is supplied. This is best achieved by the continuous neutralization obtained when solid CaCO, is present in the culture. Dextran production is always accompanied by accumulation of fructose in the culture liquid together with a reducing fructose-containing disaccharide. Dextran can sometimes be produced in a simple liquid sucrose + proteose peptone medium with no phosphate buffering. Other things being equal, the presence of CO, or HCO, does not greatly increase the yield of bacterial protein in sucrose media.
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.