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Sökning: WFRF:(Schweder T.)

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1.
  • Enfors, Sven-Olof, et al. (författare)
  • Physiological responses to mixing in large scale bioreactors
  • 2001
  • Ingår i: Journal of Biotechnology. - 0168-1656 .- 1873-4863. ; 85:2, s. 175-185
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Escherichia coli fed-batch cultivations at 22 m(3) scale were compared to corresponding laboratory scale processes and cultivations using a scale-down reactor furnished with a high-glucose concentration zone to mimic the conditions in a feed zone of the large bioreactor. Formate accumulated in the large reactor, indicating the existence of oxygen limitation zones. It is suggested that the reduced biomass yield at large scale partly is due to repeated production/reassimilation of acetate from overflow metabolism and mixed acid fermentation products due to local moving zones with oxygen limitation. The conditions that generated mixed-acid fermentation in the scale-down reactor also induced a number of stress responses, monitored by analysis of mRNA of selected stress induced genes. The stress responses were relaxed when the cells returned to the substrate limited and oxygen sufficient compartment of the reactor. Corresponding analysis in the large reactor showed that the concentration of mRNA of four stress induced genes was lowest at the sampling port most distant from the feed zone. It is assumed that repeated induction/relaxation of stress responses in a large bioreactor may contribute to altered physiological properties of the cells grown in large-scale bioreactor. Flow cytometric analysis revealed reduced damage with respect to cytoplasmic membrane potential and integrity in cells grown in the dynamic environments of the large scale reactor and the scale-down reactor.
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2.
  • Gabig-Ciminska, Magdalena, et al. (författare)
  • Electric chips for rapid detection and quantification of nucleic acids
  • 2004
  • Ingår i: Biosensors & bioelectronics. - : Elsevier BV. - 0956-5663 .- 1873-4235. ; 19:6, s. 537-546
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • A silicon chip-based electric detector coupled to bead-based sandwich hybridization (BBSH) is presented as an approach to perform rapid analysis of specific nucleic acids. A microfluidic platform incorporating paramagnetic beads with immobilized capture probes is used for the biorecognition steps. The protocol involves simultaneous sandwich hybridization of a single-stranded nucleic acid target with the capture probe on the beads and with a detection probe in the reaction solution, followed by enzyme labeling of the detection probe, enzymatic reaction, and finally, potentiometric measurement of the enzyme product at the chip surface. Anti-DIG-alkaline phosphatase conjugate was used for the enzyme labeling of the DIG-labeled detection probe. p-Aminophenol phosphate (pAPP) was used as a substrate. The enzyme reaction product, p-aminophenol (pAP), is oxidized at the anode of the chip to quinoneimine that is reduced back to pAP at the cathode. The cycling oxidation and reduction of these compounds result in a current producing a characteristic signal that can be related to the concentration of the analyte. The performance of the different steps in the assay was characterized using in vitro synthesized RNA oligonucleotides and then the instrument was used for analysis of 16S rRNA in Escherichia coli extract. The assay time depends on the sensitivity required. Artificial RNA target and 16S rRNA, in amounts ranging from 10(11) to 10(10) molecules, were assayed within 25 min and 4 h, respectively.
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3.
  • Herlemann, D. P. R., et al. (författare)
  • Individual Physiological Adaptations Enable Selected Bacterial Taxa To Prevail during Long-Term Incubations
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: Applied and Environmental Microbiology. - : AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY. - 0099-2240 .- 1098-5336. ; 85:15
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Enclosure experiments are frequently used to investigate the impact of changing environmental conditions on microbial assemblages. Yet, how the incubation itself challenges complex bacterial communities is thus far unknown. In this study, metaproteomic profiling, 16S rRNA gene analyses, and cell counts were combined to evaluate bacterial communities derived from marine, mesohaline, and oligohaline conditions after long-term batch incubations. Early in the experiment, the three bacterial communities were highly diverse and differed significantly in their compositions. Manipulation of the enclosures with terrigenous dissolved organic carbon resulted in notable differences compared to the control enclosures at this early phase of the experiment. However, after 55 days, bacterial communities in the manipulated and the control enclosures under marine and mesohaline conditions were all dominated by gammaproteobacterium Spongiibacter. In the oligohaline enclosures, actinobacterial cluster I of the hgc group (hgc-I) remained abundant in the late phase of the incubation. Metaproteome analyses suggested that the ability to use outer membrane-based internal energy stores, in addition to the previously described grazing resistance, may enable the gammaproteobacterium Spongiibacter to prevail in long-time incubations. Under oligohaline conditions, the utilization of external recalcitrant carbon appeared to be more important (hgc-I). Enclosure experiments with complex natural microbial communities are important tools to investigate the effects of manipulations. However, species-specific properties, such as individual carbon storage strategies, can cause manipulation-independent effects and need to be considered when interpreting results from enclosures. IMPORTANCE In microbial ecology, enclosure studies are often used to investigate the effect of single environmental factors on complex bacterial communities. However, in addition to the manipulation, unintended effects ("bottle effect") may occur due to the enclosure itself. In this study, we analyzed the bacterial communities that originated from three different salinities of the Baltic Sea, comparing their compositions and physiological activities both at the early stage and after 55 days of incubation. Our results suggested that internal carbon storage strategies impact the success of certain bacterial species, independent of the experimental manipulation. Thus, while enclosure experiments remain valid tools in environmental research, microbial community composition shifts must be critically followed. This investigation of the metaproteome during long-term batch enclosures expanded our current understanding of the so-called "bottle effect," which is well known to occur during enclosure experiments.
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4.
  • Rozkov, A., et al. (författare)
  • Dynamics of proteolysis and its influence on the accumulation of intracellular recombinant proteins
  • 2000
  • Ingår i: Enzyme and microbial technology. - 0141-0229 .- 1879-0909. ; 27:10, s. 743-748
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • A method to quantify the impact of proteolysis on accumulation of recombinant proteins in E. coli is described. A much smaller intracellular concentration of staphylococcal protein A (SpA) (14.7 mg.g(-1)) compared to the fusion protein SpA-beta galactosidase (138 mg.g(-1)) is explained by a very high proteolysis rate constant of SpA. The SpA synthesis rate reached a maximum one hour after induction and gradually decreased to half of this value at the end of the cultivation. The decrease of the synthesis rate and the Ist order kinetics of proteolysis lead to an equilibrium between synthesis and degradation of SpA from 2 h after induction. This resulted in no further SpA accumulation in cells, though synthesis continued for at least 10 h. Similar experiments with recombinant protein ZZT2 also revealed that most of the synthesized product was degraded. The order of proteolysis kinetics depended on the concentration of the recombinant protein: at low concentrations both SpA and ZZT2 were degraded according to first order kinetics, while at high concentrations ZZT2 was degraded according to zero order kinetics. In a protease Clp mutant the degradation rate decreased and intracellular concentration of ZZT2 increased from 50 mg.g(-1) to 120 mg.g(-1). The measurements of proteolysis rate throughout the cultivation enabled calculation of a hypothetical accumulation of the product assuming complete stabilization. In this case the concentration would have increased from 50 to 280 mg.g(-1) in II h. Thus, this method reveals the potential to increase the productivity by eliminating proteolysis.
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