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Metabolic Profiling of Geobacter sulfurreducens during Industrial Bioprocess Scale-Up

Muhamadali, H; Xu, Y; Ellis, DI; Allwood, JW; Rattray, NJW; Correa, E; Alrabiah, H; Lloyd, JR; Goodacre, R; Löffler, FE

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Authors

H Muhamadali

Y Xu

DI Ellis

JW Allwood

NJW Rattray

E Correa

H Alrabiah

JR Lloyd

R Goodacre

FE Löffler



Abstract

During the industrial scale-up of bioprocesses it is important to establish that the biological system has not changed significantly when moving from small laboratory-scale shake flasks or culturing bottles to an industrially relevant production level. Therefore, during upscaling of biomass production for a range of metal transformations, including the production of biogenic magnetite nanoparticles by Geobacter sulfurreducens, from 100-ml bench-scale to 5-liter fermentors, we applied Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy as a metabolic fingerprinting approach followed by the analysis of bacterial cell extracts by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) for metabolic profiling. FTIR results clearly differentiated between the phenotypic changes associated with different growth phases as well as the two culturing conditions. Furthermore, the clustering patterns displayed by multivariate analysis were in agreement with the turbidimetric measurements, which displayed an extended lag phase for cells grown in a 5-liter bioreactor (24 h) compared to those grown in 100-ml serum bottles (6 h). GC-MS analysis of the cell extracts demonstrated an overall accumulation of fumarate during the lag phase under both culturing conditions, coinciding with the detected concentrations of oxaloacetate, pyruvate, nicotinamide, and glycerol-3-phosphate being at their lowest levels compared to other growth phases. These metabolites were overlaid onto a metabolic network of G. sulfurreducens, and taking into account the levels of these metabolites throughout the fermentation process, the limited availability of oxaloacetate and nicotinamide would seem to be the main metabolic bottleneck resulting from this scale-up process. Additional metabolite-feeding experiments were carried out to validate the above hypothesis. Nicotinamide supplementation (1 mM) did not display any significant effects on the lag phase of G. sulfurreducens cells grown in the 100-ml serum bottles. However, it significantly improved the growth behavior of cells grown in the 5-liter bioreactor by reducing the lag phase from 24 h to 6 h, while providing higher yield than in the 100-ml serum bottles.

Citation

Muhamadali, H., Xu, Y., Ellis, D., Allwood, J., Rattray, N., Correa, E., …Löffler, F. (2015). Metabolic Profiling of Geobacter sulfurreducens during Industrial Bioprocess Scale-Up. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 81(10), 3288-3298. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00294-15

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 24, 2015
Online Publication Date Apr 22, 2015
Publication Date Apr 22, 2015
Deposit Date Feb 7, 2017
Publicly Available Date Feb 7, 2017
Journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Print ISSN 0099-2240
Publisher American Society for Microbiology
Volume 81
Issue 10
Pages 3288-3298
DOI https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00294-15
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00294-15
Related Public URLs http://aem.asm.org/

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