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Evidence for chaotropicity/kosmotropicity offset in a yeast growth model. | LitMetric

Evidence for chaotropicity/kosmotropicity offset in a yeast growth model.

Biotechnol Lett

School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Brighton, Huxley Building, Lewes Road, Brighton, BN2 4GJ, UK.

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chaotropes are compounds that disrupt the structure of biological molecules, posing challenges in ethanol and butanol fermentations due to their inhibitory effects on microbial growth.
  • The study explores the use of kosmotropes, which counteract chaotropes, to improve the growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae during fermentation processes.
  • While kosmotropes showed potential in mitigating the inhibitory effects of urea, they did not successfully reduce the impact of ethanol, suggesting complex interactions that need further investigation.

Article Abstract

Chaotropes are compounds which cause the disordering, unfolding and denaturation of biological macromolecules. It is the chaotropicity of fermentation products that often acts as the primary limiting factor in ethanol and butanol fermentations. Since ethanol is mildly chaotropic at low concentrations, it prevents the growth of the producing microbes via its impacts on a variety of macromolecular systems and their functions. Kosmotropes have the opposite effect to chaotropes and we hypothesised that it might be possible to use these to mitigate chaotrope-induced inhibition of Saccharomyces cerevisiae growth. We also postulated that kosmotrope-mediated mitigation of chaotropicity is not quantitatively predictable. The chaotropes ethanol and urea, and compatible solutes glycerol and betaine (kosmotrope), and the highly kosmotropic salt ammonium sulphate all inhibited the growth rate of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in the concentration range 5-15%. They resulted in increased lag times, decreased maximum specific growth rates, and decreased final optical densities. Surprisingly, neither the stress protectants nor ammonium sulphate reduced the inhibition of growth caused by ethanol. Whereas, in some cases, compatible solutes and kosmotropes mitigated against the inhibitory effects of urea. However, this effect was not mathematically additive from the quantification of chao-/kosmotropicity of each individual compound. The potential effects of glycerol, betaine and/or ammonium sulphate may have been reduced or masked by the metabolic production of compatible solutes. It may nevertheless be that the addition of kosmotropes to fermentations which produce chaotropic products can enhance metabolic activity, growth rate, and/or product formation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10529-019-02737-8DOI Listing

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