• Title/Summary/Keyword: biomass${\gamma}$-linolenic acid

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Production of ${\gamma}$-Linolenic Acid by Mortierella isabellina IFO 8183 (Mortierella isabellina IFO 8183에 의한 ${\gamma}$-Linolenic Acid 생산)

  • Yang, Dong-Hyun;Nam, Hee-Sop;Lee, Sang-Hyub;Bang, Won-Gi
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.808-814
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    • 1989
  • To produce ${\gamma}-linolenic$ acid by a mold, cultural conditions of Mortierella isabellina IFO 8183 were investigated. It was found that the increase of initial pH resulted in the decrease of the ${\gamma}-Linolenic$ acid content and the increase of the C/N ratio of medium resulted in the increase of the lipid content. Addition of sodium acetate into the medium resulted in the increased of cell yield, lipid yield, ${\gamma}-Linolenic$ acid content and ${\gamma}-Linolenic$ acid productivity. Under the optimum coditions(glucose, $NH_4NO_3$, C/N ratio of 40, pH 6.0, $30^{\circ}C$ and 0.5% of sodium acetate), the following results were obtained: cell yield, 0.347(g dry biomass/g glucose; lipid yield, 0.18(g lipid/g glucose); lipid content, 0.52(g lipid/g dry biomass); ${\gamma}-linolenic$ acid content, 60(mg ${\gamma}-linolenic$ acid/g lipid); maximum ${\gamma}-linolenic$ acid concentration, 347mg/l after incubation of 8 days.

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Production of the Fungal Lipid Containing ${\gamma}-Linolenic$ Acid from Mucor sp. KCTC 8405P (Mucor sp. KCTC 8405P에 의한 ${\gamma}-Linolenic$ Acid 함유 곰팡이 유지의 생산)

  • Park, Jong-Hyun;Shin, Hyun-Kyung
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.326-329
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    • 1992
  • Mucor sp. KCTC 8405P was cultivated in a jar fermentor for the production of fungal lipid containing ${\gamma}-linolenic$ acid with feeding the glucose solution periodically. The transition of the fungal growth into the mycelial phase from yeast-like growth was achieved by pH shift after the first two day of cultivation in the low pH medium and then lipid accumulation was accelerated until the seven day of cultivation, when the glucose in the culture broth was almost consumed. With the culture conditions applied in this experiment, biomass of 99.3 g/l by the dry cell weight and the total extractable lipid of 38.0 g containing 3.5 g/l ${\gamma}-linolenic$ acid were obtained.

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Enhanced Biomass and ${\gamma}$-Linolenic Acid Production of Mutant Strain Arthrospira platensis

  • Choi, Gang-Guk;Bae, Myong-Sook;Ahn, Chi-Yong;Oh, Hee-Mock
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.539-544
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    • 2008
  • A mutant of Arthrospira platensis PCC 9108, strain M9108, obtained by mutagenesis with UV treatment, was able to mixotrophically grow in an SOT medium containing 40 g of glucose/l. The biomass and specific growth rate of strain M9108 (4.10 g/l and 0.70/d) were 1.9-fold and 1.4-fold higher, respectively, than those of the wild type (2.21 g/l and 0.58/d) under mixotrophic culture condition. In addition, when compared with the wild type, the content of ${\gamma}$-linolenic acid (GLA) in the mutant was increased when glucose concentration was increased. Compared with the wild type, the GLA content of the mutant was 2-fold higher in autotrophic culture and about 3-fold higher in mixotrophic culture. Thus, the mutant appears to possess more efficient facility to assimilate and metabolize glucose and to produce more GLA than its wild-type strain.

Metabolic Flux Distribution for $\gamma$-Linolenic Acid Synthetic Pathways in Spirulina platensis

  • Meechai Asawin;Pongakarakun Siriluk;Deshnium Patcharaporn;Cheevadhanarak Supapon;Bhumiratana Sakarindr
    • Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering:BBE
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    • v.9 no.6
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    • pp.506-513
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    • 2004
  • Spirulina produces $\gamma$-linolenic acid (GLA), an important pharmaceutical substance, in a relatively low level compared with fungi and plants, prompting more research to improve its GLA yield. In this study, metabolic flux analysis was applied to determine the cellular metabolic flux distributions in the GLA synthetic pathways of two Spiru/ina strains, wild type BP and a high­GLA producing mutant Z19/2. Simplified pathways involving the GLA synthesis of S. platensis formulated comprise of photosynthesis, gluconeogenesis, the pentose phosphate pathway, the anaplerotic pathway, the tricarboxylic cycle, the GLA synthesis pathway, and the biomass syn­thesis pathway. A stoichiometric model reflecting these pathways contains 17 intermediates and 22 reactions. Three fluxes - the bicarbonate (C-source) uptake rate, the specific growth rate, and the GLA synthesis rate - were measured and the remaining fluxes were calculated using lin­ear optimization. The calculation showed that the flux through the reaction converting acetyl­CoA into malonyl-CoA in the mutant strain was nearly three times higher than that in the wild­type strain. This finding implies that this reaction is rate controlling. This suggestion was sup­ported by experiments, in which the stimulating factors for this reaction $(NADPH\;and\;MgCl_{2})$ were added into the culture medium, resulting in an increased GLA-synthesis rate in the wild type strain.

Cultivation of Spirulina platensis Using Pig Wastewater in a Semi-Continuous Process

  • Chaiklahan, Ratana;Chirasuwan, Nattayaporn;Siangdung, Wipawan;Paithoonrangsarid, Kalyanee;Bunnag, Boosya
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.20 no.3
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    • pp.609-614
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    • 2010
  • The effluent from anaerobic digestion contains organic nitrogen and phosphorus, which are both required for growth of Spirulina platensis. Effluent (20%) from the upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) from a pig farm, supplemented with 4.5 g/l sodium bicarbonate ($NaHCO_3$) and 0.2 g/l urea fertilizer (46:0:0, N:P:K), was found to be not only a suitable medium for the growth of Spirulina platensis but also a low-cost alternative. Cost calculation showed that this medium is 4.4 times cheaper than modifized Zarrouk's medium. The average productivities of a semi-continuous culture grown under outdoor conditions in a 6-1 scale and a 100-1 pilot scale were 19.9 $g/m^2/d$ and 12 $g/m^2/d$, respectively. In addition, the biomass of organisms grown in UASB effluent contained approximately 57.9% protein, 1.12% $\gamma$-linolenic acid, and 19.5% phycocyanin. The average rates of bicarbonate, total nitrogen, and phosphorus removal were 380 mg/l/d, 34 mg/l/d, and 4 mg/l/d, respectively.