Production of Extracellular Polysaccharide by <i>Zoogloea ramigera</i>
Anders Norberg, Sven‐Olof Enfors
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Abstract
In batch cultures of Zoogloea ramigera the maximum rate of exopolysaccharide synthesis occurred in a partly growth-linked process. The exopolysaccharide was attached to the cells as a capsule. The capsules were released from the cell walls after 150 h of cultivation, which caused the fermentation broth to be highly viscous. Ultrasonication could be used to release capsular polysaccharide from the microbial cell walls. Treatment performed after 48 to 66 h of cultivation revealed exopolysaccharide concentration and apparent viscosity values in accordance with values of untreated samples withdrawn after 161 h of cultivation. The yield coefficient of exopolysaccharide on the basis of consumed glucose was in the range of 55 to 60% for batch cultivations with an initial glucose concentration of 25 g liter. An exopolysaccharide concentration of up to 38 g liter could be attained if glucose, nitrogen, and growth factors were fed into the batch culture. The oxygen consumption rate in batch fermentations reached 25 mmol of O(2) liter h during the exopolysaccharide synthesis phase and then decreased to values below 5 mmol of O(2) liter h during the release phase. The fermentation broth showed pseudoplastic flow behavior, and the polysaccharide was not degraded when growth had ceased.
Extracted Claims
9 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
oxygen consumption rate reaches 25 mmol of O(2) liter h
“The oxygen consumption rate in batch fermentations reached 25 mmol of O(2) liter h during the exopolysaccharide synthesis phase and then decreased to values below 5 mmol of O(2) liter h during the rel...”
fermentation broth shows pseudoplastic flow behavior
“The fermentation broth showed pseudoplastic flow behavior, and the polysaccharide was not degraded when growth had ceased.”
exopolysaccharide is produced batch culture
“An exopolysaccharide concentration of up to 38 g liter could be attained if glucose, nitrogen, and growth factors were fed into the batch culture.”