Dissimilation of [13C]methanol by continuous cultures of Bacillus methanolicus MGA3 at 50 °C studied by 13C NMR and isotope-ratio mass spectrometry
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Microbiology
- Vol. 148 (10) , 3223-3233
- https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-148-10-3223
Abstract
Using a continuous culture of Bacillus methanolicus MGA3 limited by 100 mM methanol in the feed and growing at a dilution rate D=0·25 h−1, transients in dissolved methanol were studied to determine the effects of methanol toxicity and the pathway of methanol dissimilation to CO2. Steady-state cultures were disturbed by pulses of methanol resulting in a rapid change in concentration of 6·4–12·8 mM. B. methanolicus MGA3 responded to a sudden increase in available methanol by a transient decline in the biomass concentration in the reactor. In most cases the culture returned to steady state between 4 and 12 h after pulse addition. However, at a methanol pulse of 12·8 mM, complete biomass washout occurred and the culture did not return to steady state. Integrating the response curves of the dry biomass concentration over a 12 h time period showed that a methanol pulse can cause an average transient decline in the biomass yield of up to 22%. 13C NMR experiments using labelled methanol indicated that the transient partial or complete biomass washout was probably caused by toxic accumulation of formaldehyde in the culture. These experiments also showed accumulation of formate, indicating that B. methanolicus possesses formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase activity resulting in a methanol dissimilation pathway via formate to CO2. Studies using isotope-ratio mass spectrometry provided further evidence of a methanol dissimilation pathway via formate. B. methanolicus MGA3, growing continuously under methanol limitation, consumed added formate at a rate of approximately 0·85 mmol l−1 h−1. Furthermore, significant accumulation of 13CO2 in the reactor exhaust gas was measured in response to a pulse addition of [13C]formic acid to the bioreactor. This indicates that B. methanolicus dissimilates methanol carbon to CO2 in order to detoxify formaldehyde by both a linear pathway to formate and a cyclic mechanism as part of the RuMP pathway.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reciprocal 13C‐Labeling: A Method for Investigating the Catabolism of CosubstratesBiotechnology Progress, 2002
- Biotransformations monitored in situ by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyTrends in Biotechnology, 2000
- Elucidation of novel biosynthetic pathways and metabolite flux patterns by retrobiosynthetic NMR analysisFEMS Microbiology Reviews, 1998
- Lysine production from methanol at 50°C using Bacillus methanolicus: Modeling volume control, lysine concentration, and productivity using a three-phase continuous simulationBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1996
- Physiological responses of a methylotrophic bacterium after sudden shifts from C-limited chemostat to C-excess batch growth conditionsJournal of Applied Bacteriology, 1995
- Bacillus methanolicus sp. nov., a New Species of Thermotolerant, Methanol-Utilizing, Endospore-Forming BacteriaInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1992
- Isolation and initial characterization of thermotolerant methylotrophicBacillusstrainsFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1988
- Formaldehyde metabolism by Escherichia coli. In vivo carbon, deuterium, and two-dimensional NMR observations of multiple detoxifying pathwaysBiochemistry, 1984
- The Prediction of Growth Yields in MethylotrophsJournal of General Microbiology, 1978
- Steam sterilizable probes for dissolved oxygen measurementBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1964