Publications by authors named "W A Knorre"

Milestones of antibiotics research and biotechnology in Jena/Thuringia are: 1938--Hans Knöll established a strain collection of microorganisms; 1942--production of penicillin on laboratory scale by Hans Knöll; since 1945--development of industrial production processes for penicillin and streptomycin; 1952--production of BCG-vaccine; since 1956--development of biotechnical processes in the Institute of Microbiology and Experimental Therapy for actinomycin C, oxytetracyclin, erythromycin, paromomycin, turimycin, griseofulvin, nystatin, and nourseothricin, and in the 1980s for streptokinase, staphylokinase, and interferons. After the German unification the Hans-Knöll-Institute for Natural Products Research was founded.

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Microfiltration is an important unit operation in downstream processing. However, due to the influence of membrane fouling, prediction of the filtration performance for biological suspensions is difficult. This paper describes a modeling approach that allows a comprehensive description of filtration performance.

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In recent years recombinant DNA technology has enabled us to produce various proteins of therapeutic importance with microorganisms. As an appropriate host organism, E. coli plays a dominant role.

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A high cell density cultivation (HCDC) for growth of Escherichia coli in an especially designed glucose/mineral salt medium is proposed. The HCDC essentially starts as a batch process which is followed by a two-phase fed-batch cultivation. After unlimited growth at mu max = 0.

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A defined medium was developed which, by means of a specific fed-batch mode, allows growth of the recombinant Escherichia coli strain TG1 (pBB210) up to a cell density of 60 g dry weight/l. Apart from glucose and aqueous ammonia fed as carbon and nitrogen sources, it was necessary to supply other nutrients or O2-enriched air. Aqueous ammonia also served for pH control.

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