Dual substrate removal by an axenic bacterial culture
- 15 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Biotechnology & Bioengineering
- Vol. 33 (3) , 327-337
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.260330312
Abstract
A pure bacterial culture capable of utilizing either L‐lysine or 2‐chlorophenol (2‐CP) as sole carbon source was isolated and used in continuous culture experiments to determine its response to dual substrate limitation by those two compounds. Dilution rate and feed composition were each set at three levels in a two factorial experimental design. The total chemical oxygen demand (COD) of the feed was fixed at 225 mg/L and its composition was varied by changing the ratio of lysine to 2‐CP. The effects of the two independent variables (dilution rate and feed composition) on the concentrations of cells, lysine, COD, and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the reactors were systematic whereas the effects on the 2‐CP concentration were less predictable. The concentrations of the two substrates responded to the two independent variables in a complex interactive manner which is not explained by existing models for dual, substitutable substrates. Rather, the results suggested that the prediction of the fate of a single organic component in a reactor receiving a multicomponent feed is a very difficult task.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of lac operon expression in mixed sugar chemostat culturesBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1987
- Investigation of bacterial growth on mixed substrates: Experimental evaluation of cybernetic modelsBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1986
- A cybernetic view of microbial growth: Modeling of cells as optimal strategistsBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1985
- Cybernetic modeling of microbial growth on multiple substratesBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1984
- Kinetics of biodegradation of 2,4‐dichlorophenoxyacetate in the presence of glucoseBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1982
- Simple device for level control with subsurface drawoff in chemostatsBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1980
- Resources: A Graphical-Mechanistic Approach to Competition and PredationThe American Naturalist, 1980
- Competition for mixed substrates by microbial populationsBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1977
- A model for the bio-oxidation process based on product formation conceptsWater Research, 1977
- Competition between two species for two complementary or substitutable resourcesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1975