4.7 Article

High-cell-density cultivation of Vibrio natriegens in a low-chloride chemically defined medium

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-023-12799-4

Keywords

Vibrio natriegens; Specific growth rate; Fed-batch; Corrosion; High-cell-density cultivation; Ammonium magnesium phosphate; Citrate; Precipitation

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V. natriegens is a halophilic bacterium with the fastest generation time reported so far. A low-chloride chemically defined medium has been developed to achieve high-cell-density cultivation and prevent corrosion on metal surfaces.
Vibrio natriegens is a halophilic bacterium with the fastest generation time of non-pathogenic bacteria reported so far. It therefore has high potential as a production strain for biotechnological production processes or other applications in biotechnology. Culture media for V. natriegens typically contain high sodium chloride concentrations. The corresponding high chloride concentrations can lead to corrosion processes on metal surfaces in bioreactors. Here we report the development of a low-chloride chemically defined medium for V. natriegens. Sodium chloride was completely replaced by the sodium salts disodium hydrogen phosphate, disodium sulfate, and sodium citrate, while keeping the total concentration of sodium ions constant. The use of citrate prevents the occurrence of precipitates, especially of ammonium magnesium phosphate. With this defined medium, high-cell-density fed-batch cultivations in laboratory-scale bioreactors using exponential feeding yielded biomass concentrations of more than 60 g L-1.

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