4.2 Article

Fermentation technologies for the production of exopolysaccharide-synthesizing Lactobacillus rhamnosus concentrated cultures

Journal

ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 211-220

Publisher

UNIV CATOLICA DE VALPARAISO
DOI: 10.2225/vol10-issue2-fulltext-10

Keywords

alginate beads; fed-batch culture; temperature

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The exopolysaccharide (EPS)-producing cultures such as Lactobacillus rhamnosus RW-9595M present a challenge for the culture producers because the high viscosity of the fermented growth medium makes it difficult to recover the cells by centrifugation or filtration. This study examined four approaches to reduce viscosity of the medium while producing high cell densities: incubation temperature, extended incubation in the stationary growth phase, production in alginate gel beads and fed-batch fermentation technology. Automated spectrophotometry ( AS) was used to study the effects of temperature, pH and lactate level on growth of the strain. In AS assays, there was no significant difference in final maximal biomass production at temperatures ranging between 34 degrees C to 44 degrees C, but lower yields were noted at 46 degrees C. A pH below 6.0 and a lactate concentration higher than 4% almost completely prevented growth. Under batch fermentation conditions, the viscosity of the medium obtained at 37 degrees C was two fold higher than for 44 degrees C. For cultures produced at 37 degrees C, centrifugation at 10000 g during 5 min did not allow complete recovery of cells, in contrast to cultures grown at 44 degrees C. An extended period of incubation (5 hrs) in the stationary growth phase did not reduce the final viscosity of the growth medium. For similar biomass levels, the glucose-based fed-batch fermentation allowed a 40% reduction in viscosity of the fermented medium in comparison to traditional batch cultures. High-density cell populations ( 3 x 10(10) CFU/g) were obtained when L. rhamnosus RW-9595M was grown in alginate beads. However, overall biomass yields in the immobilized cell bioreactor were half of those obtained in free-cell fermentations. Therefore three methods of producing concentrated EPS-producing cultures are proposed.

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