Succinic acid production was inhibited by high osmotic pressure caused by the accumulation of sodium ions in the process of two-stage fermentation by Escherichia coli using Na2CO3 as the pH regulator. To enhance the resistance of this strain to osmotic stress, the possibility to isolate high NaCl-tolerant mutant strain of Escherichia coli for succinic acid production by metabolic evolution was investigated. The metabolic evolution system was used as a mutant-generating system, allowing the cells to be continuously cultured at the maximum specific growth rate. The mutant strain can grow at maximum rate in the condition of high osmotic by gradually improving the concentration of NaCl in a continuous culture. Then the high osmotic-tolerant mutant strain of E. coli XB4 was selected with NaCl as the osmo-regulator. When using Na2CO3 as the pH regulator, E. coli XB4 was used in a 7.0 L fermenter during two-stage fermentation. After 60 h anaerobic fermentation, the mutant strain XB4 produced 69.5 g/L succinic acid with a productivity of 1.18 g/(L x h), which were increased by 18.6% and 20% compared with that of the parent strain.
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