• Title of article

    How Streptomyces lividans uses oils and sugars as mixed substrates

  • Author/Authors

    Lynn Peacock، نويسنده , , John Ward، نويسنده , , Colin Ratledge and Roland K. Strong، نويسنده , , Mark Dickinson، نويسنده , , Andrew Ison، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    157
  • To page
    166
  • Abstract
    Oils are used as carbon sources in antibiotic fermentations both for economic reasons and because higher antibiotic titres often result. The model organism, Streptomyces lividans, grew to a higher cell density and produced the antibiotic, actinorhodin, faster with a combination of glucose and the triacylglycerol triolein than with either substrate alone. When triolein was sole substrate, β-oxidation rates were maximal and there was no evidence of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis. With glucose as the sole carbon source, fatty acid biosynthesis took place and there was no β-oxidation. With the mixed substrates, there was neither β-oxidation nor fatty acid biosynthesis, indicating that glucose provided all the intermediates down to the level of acetate and that the triolein provided the majority of the straight-chain fatty acyl groups in the lipids. Thus, the cells use both substrates simultaneously, evidently by mutually exclusive mechanisms, thereby achieving increased growth and productivity and explaining why such mixed nutrients are beneficial in Streptomyces fermentations.
  • Keywords
    Oil and sugar metabolism , ?-Oxidation , Streptomyces lividans
  • Journal title
    Enzyme and Microbial Technology
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Enzyme and Microbial Technology
  • Record number

    1173800