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Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures

In spite of the large number of reports on fed-batch cultivation of E. coli, alternative cultivation/induction strategies remain to be more deeply exploited. Among these strategies, it could be mentioned the use of complex media with combination of different carbon sources, novel induction procedure...

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Autores principales: da Silva, Adilson José, Horta, Antônio Carlos Luperni, Velez, Ana Maria, Iemma, Mônica Rosas C, Sargo, Cíntia Regina, Giordano, Raquel LC, Novo, Maria Teresa M, Giordano, Roberto C, Zangirolami, Teresa Cristina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3724991/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23961396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-2-322
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author da Silva, Adilson José
Horta, Antônio Carlos Luperni
Velez, Ana Maria
Iemma, Mônica Rosas C
Sargo, Cíntia Regina
Giordano, Raquel LC
Novo, Maria Teresa M
Giordano, Roberto C
Zangirolami, Teresa Cristina
author_facet da Silva, Adilson José
Horta, Antônio Carlos Luperni
Velez, Ana Maria
Iemma, Mônica Rosas C
Sargo, Cíntia Regina
Giordano, Raquel LC
Novo, Maria Teresa M
Giordano, Roberto C
Zangirolami, Teresa Cristina
author_sort da Silva, Adilson José
collection PubMed
description In spite of the large number of reports on fed-batch cultivation of E. coli, alternative cultivation/induction strategies remain to be more deeply exploited. Among these strategies, it could be mentioned the use of complex media with combination of different carbon sources, novel induction procedures and feed flow rate control matching the actual cell growth rate. Here, four different carbon source combinations (glucose, glycerol, glucose + glycerol and auto-induction) in batch media formulation were compared. A balanced combination of glucose and glycerol in a complex medium formulation led to: fast growth in the batch-phase; reduced plasmid instability by preventing early expression leakage; and protein volumetric productivity of 0.40 g.L(-1).h(-1). Alternative induction strategies were also investigated. A mixture of lactose and glycerol as supplementary medium fully induced a high biomass population, reaching a good balance between specific protein production (0.148 g(prot).g(DCW)(-1)) and volumetric productivity (0.32 g.L(-1).h(-1)). The auto-induction protocol showed excellent results on specific protein production (0.158 g(prot).g(DCW)(-1)) in simple batch cultivations. An automated feed control based on the on-line estimated growth rate was implemented, which allowed cells to grow at higher rates than those generally used to avoid metabolic overflow, without leading to acetate accumulation. Some of the protocols described here may provide a useful alternative to standard cultivation and recombinant protein production processes, depending on the performance index that is expected to be optimized. The protocols using glycerol as carbon source and induction by lactose feeding, or glycerol plus glucose in batch medium and induction by lactose pulse led to rSpaA production in the range of 6 g.L(-1), in short fed-batch processes (16 to 20 h) with low accumulation of undesired side metabolites.
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spelling pubmed-37249912013-08-01 Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures da Silva, Adilson José Horta, Antônio Carlos Luperni Velez, Ana Maria Iemma, Mônica Rosas C Sargo, Cíntia Regina Giordano, Raquel LC Novo, Maria Teresa M Giordano, Roberto C Zangirolami, Teresa Cristina Springerplus Research In spite of the large number of reports on fed-batch cultivation of E. coli, alternative cultivation/induction strategies remain to be more deeply exploited. Among these strategies, it could be mentioned the use of complex media with combination of different carbon sources, novel induction procedures and feed flow rate control matching the actual cell growth rate. Here, four different carbon source combinations (glucose, glycerol, glucose + glycerol and auto-induction) in batch media formulation were compared. A balanced combination of glucose and glycerol in a complex medium formulation led to: fast growth in the batch-phase; reduced plasmid instability by preventing early expression leakage; and protein volumetric productivity of 0.40 g.L(-1).h(-1). Alternative induction strategies were also investigated. A mixture of lactose and glycerol as supplementary medium fully induced a high biomass population, reaching a good balance between specific protein production (0.148 g(prot).g(DCW)(-1)) and volumetric productivity (0.32 g.L(-1).h(-1)). The auto-induction protocol showed excellent results on specific protein production (0.158 g(prot).g(DCW)(-1)) in simple batch cultivations. An automated feed control based on the on-line estimated growth rate was implemented, which allowed cells to grow at higher rates than those generally used to avoid metabolic overflow, without leading to acetate accumulation. Some of the protocols described here may provide a useful alternative to standard cultivation and recombinant protein production processes, depending on the performance index that is expected to be optimized. The protocols using glycerol as carbon source and induction by lactose feeding, or glycerol plus glucose in batch medium and induction by lactose pulse led to rSpaA production in the range of 6 g.L(-1), in short fed-batch processes (16 to 20 h) with low accumulation of undesired side metabolites. Springer International Publishing 2013-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3724991/ /pubmed/23961396 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-2-322 Text en © da Silva et al.; licensee Springer. 2013 This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
da Silva, Adilson José
Horta, Antônio Carlos Luperni
Velez, Ana Maria
Iemma, Mônica Rosas C
Sargo, Cíntia Regina
Giordano, Raquel LC
Novo, Maria Teresa M
Giordano, Roberto C
Zangirolami, Teresa Cristina
Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures
title Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures
title_full Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures
title_fullStr Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures
title_full_unstemmed Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures
title_short Non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in rE. coli fed-batch cultures
title_sort non-conventional induction strategies for production of subunit swine erysipelas vaccine antigen in re. coli fed-batch cultures
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3724991/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23961396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-2-322
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