Change of extracellular cAMP concentration is a sensitive reporter for bacterial fitness in high-cell-density cultures of Escherichia coli.

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Change of extracellular cAMP concentration is a sensitive reporter for bacterial fitness in high-cell-density cultures of Escherichia coli. / Lin, Hongying; Hoffmann, Frank; Rozkov, Aleksei; Enfors, Sven-Olof; Rinas, Ursula; Neubauer, Peter.

In: BIOTECHNOL BIOENG, Vol. 87, No. 5, 5, 2004, p. 602-613.

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@article{401a002e6b0a496da97aeafd5b4ff3e7,
title = "Change of extracellular cAMP concentration is a sensitive reporter for bacterial fitness in high-cell-density cultures of Escherichia coli.",
abstract = "Guanosine-3',5'-tetraphosphate (ppGpp) and sigmaS, two regulators of the starvation response of Escherichia coli, have received increasing attention for monitoring cell physiological changes in production processes, although both are difficult to quantify. The kinetics of cAMP formation and degradation were not yet investigated in such processes, although the complex regulation of cAMP by synthesis, release, and degradation in connection with straightforward methods for analysis renders it a highly informative target. Therefore, we followed the cAMP concentration in various nonrecombinant and in four different recombinant glucose-limited fed-batch processes in different production scales. The intracellular cAMP concentration increases strongly at the end of the batch phase. Most cAMP is released to the cultivation medium. The rates of accumulation and degradation of extracellular cAMP are growth-rate-dependent and show a distinct maximum at a growth rate of about 0.35 h(-1). At very low growth rates, below 0.05 h(-1), extracellular cAMP is not produced but rather degraded, independent of whether this low growth rate is caused by glucose limitation or by the high metabolic load of recombinant protein production. In contrast to intracellular cAMP, which is highly unstable, analysis of extracellular cAMP is simpler and the kinetics of accumulation and degradation reflect well the physiological situation, including unlimited growth, limitation, and severe starvation of a production host.",
author = "Hongying Lin and Frank Hoffmann and Aleksei Rozkov and Sven-Olof Enfors and Ursula Rinas and Peter Neubauer",
year = "2004",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "87",
pages = "602--613",
journal = "BIOTECHNOL BIOENG",
issn = "0006-3592",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Change of extracellular cAMP concentration is a sensitive reporter for bacterial fitness in high-cell-density cultures of Escherichia coli.

AU - Lin, Hongying

AU - Hoffmann, Frank

AU - Rozkov, Aleksei

AU - Enfors, Sven-Olof

AU - Rinas, Ursula

AU - Neubauer, Peter

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Guanosine-3',5'-tetraphosphate (ppGpp) and sigmaS, two regulators of the starvation response of Escherichia coli, have received increasing attention for monitoring cell physiological changes in production processes, although both are difficult to quantify. The kinetics of cAMP formation and degradation were not yet investigated in such processes, although the complex regulation of cAMP by synthesis, release, and degradation in connection with straightforward methods for analysis renders it a highly informative target. Therefore, we followed the cAMP concentration in various nonrecombinant and in four different recombinant glucose-limited fed-batch processes in different production scales. The intracellular cAMP concentration increases strongly at the end of the batch phase. Most cAMP is released to the cultivation medium. The rates of accumulation and degradation of extracellular cAMP are growth-rate-dependent and show a distinct maximum at a growth rate of about 0.35 h(-1). At very low growth rates, below 0.05 h(-1), extracellular cAMP is not produced but rather degraded, independent of whether this low growth rate is caused by glucose limitation or by the high metabolic load of recombinant protein production. In contrast to intracellular cAMP, which is highly unstable, analysis of extracellular cAMP is simpler and the kinetics of accumulation and degradation reflect well the physiological situation, including unlimited growth, limitation, and severe starvation of a production host.

AB - Guanosine-3',5'-tetraphosphate (ppGpp) and sigmaS, two regulators of the starvation response of Escherichia coli, have received increasing attention for monitoring cell physiological changes in production processes, although both are difficult to quantify. The kinetics of cAMP formation and degradation were not yet investigated in such processes, although the complex regulation of cAMP by synthesis, release, and degradation in connection with straightforward methods for analysis renders it a highly informative target. Therefore, we followed the cAMP concentration in various nonrecombinant and in four different recombinant glucose-limited fed-batch processes in different production scales. The intracellular cAMP concentration increases strongly at the end of the batch phase. Most cAMP is released to the cultivation medium. The rates of accumulation and degradation of extracellular cAMP are growth-rate-dependent and show a distinct maximum at a growth rate of about 0.35 h(-1). At very low growth rates, below 0.05 h(-1), extracellular cAMP is not produced but rather degraded, independent of whether this low growth rate is caused by glucose limitation or by the high metabolic load of recombinant protein production. In contrast to intracellular cAMP, which is highly unstable, analysis of extracellular cAMP is simpler and the kinetics of accumulation and degradation reflect well the physiological situation, including unlimited growth, limitation, and severe starvation of a production host.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 87

SP - 602

EP - 613

JO - BIOTECHNOL BIOENG

JF - BIOTECHNOL BIOENG

SN - 0006-3592

IS - 5

M1 - 5

ER -