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Metabolic and energetic aspects of the growth of Bacillus stearothermophilus in glucose-limited and glucose-sufficient chemostat culture

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Abstract

With a glucose-limited chemostat culture of Bacillus stearothermophilus, increasing the incubation temperature progressively from 45°C to 63°C led to a progressive marked increase in the maintenance rates of glucose and oxygen consumption. Hence, at a fixed low dilution rate the yield values with respect to glucose and oxygen decreased substantially with increased temperature. However, the apparent Y maxglucose and \(Y_{{\text{O}}_2 }^{\max } \) values did not decrease but actually increased with temperature, being highest at 63°C (i.e., close to the maximum growth temperature). With glucose-sufficient cultures growing at a fixed low dilution rate (0.2 h−1) and at their optimum temperature (55°C), glucose and oxygen consumption rates invariably were higher than that of a corresponding glucose-limited culture. Cation (K+ or Mg2+)-limited cultures expressed the highest metabolic rates and with the K+ limited culture this rate was found to be very markedly temperature dependent. As the temperature was increased from 45°C to 63°C the rate of glucose consumption increased 1.8-fold, and that of oxygen consumption by 3.7-fold. The culture pH value also exerted a noticeable effect on the metabolic rate of a glucose-limited culture, particularly at the extremes of pH tolerance (5.5 and 8.5, respectively). A K+-limited culture was less affected with respect to metabolic rate by the culture pH value though the steady state bacterial concentration, and thus the cellular K+ content, changed substantially. These results are discussed in relation to previous findings of the behaviour of this organism in batch culture, and to the behaviour of other thermophilic Bacillus species in chemostat culture.

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Pennock, J., Tempest, D.W. Metabolic and energetic aspects of the growth of Bacillus stearothermophilus in glucose-limited and glucose-sufficient chemostat culture. Arch. Microbiol. 150, 452–459 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00422286

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