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ferda Mavituna

    ferda Mavituna

    Cell suspension culture of C. roseus in a stirred-tank bioreactor was subjected to a 6 h anaerobic period at intervals of 42 h. The anaerobic treatments resulted in the inhibition of cell growth, a reduction in cell viability, and an... more
    Cell suspension culture of C. roseus in a stirred-tank bioreactor was subjected to a 6 h anaerobic period at intervals of 42 h. The anaerobic treatments resulted in the inhibition of cell growth, a reduction in cell viability, and an increase in the pH of medium and ethanol production. However, the injured responses to anaerobiosis could recover to varying degrees when the culture was transferred to aerobic conditions, indicating that no permanent, irreversible injury to the culture has been caused by the short anaerobic period (6h). The activities of secondary metabolism, the production of ajmalicine and catharanthine, reacted to anaerobic stress in different ways. Anaerobic stress did not significantly affect ajmalicine production but triggered the biosynthesis of catharanthine. Anaerobic stress stimulated the release of these alkaloids from cells into the medium.
    ABSTRACT This study reports a novel method for embryo separation by cold treatment of heterogeneous suspension cultures which contain embryogenic single cells, cell clusters and embryos at various stages of development. The method was... more
    ABSTRACT This study reports a novel method for embryo separation by cold treatment of heterogeneous suspension cultures which contain embryogenic single cells, cell clusters and embryos at various stages of development. The method was applied to embryo suspension cultures of pepper (Capsicum annuum) and sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum). In both plants, single cells lost their viability dramatically over a few days while the viability of embryos remained above 95% for 25-30 days when kept at 5 °C. The effect of duration of cold treatment on embryo germination was also tested. The optimal duration of cold treatment was found to be 10 days for sugarcane and 21 days for pepper. After the cold treatment, the germination percentages were 90% and 96% for sugarcane and pepper, respectively.
    Plants have always provided food, fuel, food additives, drugs, pesticides, pigments, resins, perfumes and other important industrial, medicinal and agricultural raw materials. The techniques of plant, organ, tissue and cell culture have... more
    Plants have always provided food, fuel, food additives, drugs, pesticides, pigments, resins, perfumes and other important industrial, medicinal and agricultural raw materials. The techniques of plant, organ, tissue and cell culture have evolved since the beginning of this century and combined with recent advances in genetics and using conventional plant breeding, the plant biotechnology is having a significant impact on agriculture, horticulture and forestry. Some examples of the current applications in agriculture are micropropagation, somatic embryogenesis, virus and pathogen elimination, embryo rescue, germplasm storage and plant modification by somaclonal variation and genetic engineering. Another significant potential of plant biotechnology is in vitro production of fine chemicals using plant cell/organ cultures. However, there are several problems associated with such production technologies and the commercial processes are confined to a few examples, mainly in Japan. The whole field of plant biotechnology is expanding fast; with increased understanding of plant biochemistry, molecular biology, physiology and parallel developments in analytical sciences, instrumentation, bioreactor design and downstream processing the future can hold exciting possibilities.
    The Wageningen UR Library Catalogue contains bibliographic data on books and periodicals held by the libraries of Wageningen University and Research Centre and some 15 associated libraries. Holding data are added to each record. ...... more
    The Wageningen UR Library Catalogue contains bibliographic data on books and periodicals held by the libraries of Wageningen University and Research Centre and some 15 associated libraries. Holding data are added to each record. ... Subjects covered include Agrotechnology, Food and Food Production, Plant and Animal Sciences, Soil Science, Geo-information, Landscape and Spatial Planning, Water and Climate, Ecosystem Studies, Economics and Society. ... The joint collections of the participating libraries cover a substantial part of ...
    Scale-up has been one of the major problems in bioprocess technology. Earlier methods of trial-and-error have now been replaced by those which involve the understanding of the fundamental phenomena, at least for the simpler cases. For... more
    Scale-up has been one of the major problems in bioprocess technology. Earlier methods of trial-and-error have now been replaced by those which involve the understanding of the fundamental phenomena, at least for the simpler cases. For more complicated heterogeneous systems the employment of various rules of thumb is still widely practised. A summary of various strategies for bioreactor scale-up is given below.
    The aim of this work was to investigate the interaction between E.coli and Streptomyces coelicolor A3 (2) for the increased production of undecylprodigiosin and identify the E. coli actives mediating this inter-species interaction. The... more
    The aim of this work was to investigate the interaction between E.coli and Streptomyces coelicolor A3 (2) for the increased production of undecylprodigiosin and identify the E. coli actives mediating this inter-species interaction. The antibiotics of interest were the red-pigmented undecylprodigiosin and blue-pigmented actinorhodin. Pure cultures of S. coelicolor in a defined medium produced higher concentrations of actinorhodin compared to those of undecylprodigiosin. The latter however, is more important due to its immunosuppressive and antitumor properties. As a strategy to increase undecylprodigiosin production, we added separately, live cells and heat-killed cells of E. coli C600, and the cell-free supernatant of E. coli culture to S. coelicolor cultures in shake flasks. The interaction with live cells of E. coli altered the antibiotic production pattern and undecylprodigiosin production was enhanced by 3.5-fold compared to the pure cultures of S. coelicolor and actinorhodin decreased by 15-fold. The heat-killed cells of E. coli however, had no effect on antibiotic production. In all cases, growth and glucose consumption of S. coelicolor remained almost the same as those observed in the pure culture indicating that the changes in antibiotic production were not due to nutritional stress. Results with cell-free supernatant of E. coli culture indicated that the interaction between S. coelicolor and E. coli was mediated via diffusible molecule(s). Using a set of extraction procedures and agar-well diffusion bioassays, we isolated and preliminarily identified a class of compounds. For the preliminary verification, we added the compound which was the common chemical structural moiety in this class of compounds to the pure S. coelicolor cultures. We observed similar effects on antibiotic production as with the live E. coli cells and their supernatant indicating that this class of compounds secreted by E. coli indeed could act as actives during interspecies interaction and increase the production of undecylprodigiosin.
    Cell immobilisation in pre-formed carriers involves passive/natural immobilisation usually in situ in the bioreactors or in the culture environment. Numerous inorganic and organic materials have been used as pre-formed carriers:... more
    Cell immobilisation in pre-formed carriers involves passive/natural immobilisation usually in situ in the bioreactors or in the culture environment. Numerous inorganic and organic materials have been used as pre-formed carriers: reticulated polyurethane and polyvinyl formal foam, other polymers, plastics, stainless steel, ceramic, glass, synthetic (ion exchange) resins, activated charcoal, aluminium oxide, diatomaceous earth, sand, cellulose, lignocellulose, cellulose acetate, and others. In this chapter however, only polyurethane foam, stainless steel knitted mesh, ceramic, glass and cellulose will be considered.
    Streptomyces coelicolor was immobilised "naturally" in porous support materials and its growth, glucose uptake and actinorhodin production were compared with freely suspended culture using defined and complex media. When... more
    Streptomyces coelicolor was immobilised "naturally" in porous support materials and its growth, glucose uptake and actinorhodin production were compared with freely suspended culture using defined and complex media. When the defined medium was used, the most pronounced difference between the two cultures was the accumulation of actinorhodin extracellularly in freely suspended and intracellularly in immobilised cultures. In the complex medium, however, actinorhodin was excreted by both cultures. In addition, the complex medium yielded 50 times as much actinorhodin compared to the defined medium. Further increases in product concentration were obtained by repeated batches of immobilised culture, which showed stability for at least 3 months.
    ABSTRACT A protocol was developed for regeneration of pepper (Capsicum annuum var. Ace) through somatic embryogenesis in liquid media. For embryogenic callus formation, mature zygotic embryo explants were used on basal Murashige and Skoog... more
    ABSTRACT A protocol was developed for regeneration of pepper (Capsicum annuum var. Ace) through somatic embryogenesis in liquid media. For embryogenic callus formation, mature zygotic embryo explants were used on basal Murashige and Skoog medium with 9.05 M 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and 3% sucrose. Embryogenic callus was transferred to liquid basal Murashige and Skoog medium with 4.52 M 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and 3% sucrose in order to increase the mass of the embryogenic culture. After pretreatment with potassium citrate, cells were placed into embryo initiation medium with 6 g l-1 l-proline and a decreased (10 mM) ammonium concentration. Embryos were matured in 1.89 M abscisic acid containing half-strength Murashige and Skoog medium and converted into plants bothin vivo andin vitro at up to a 97% efficiency.
    A stoichiometric model was developed for the application of metabolic flux balance analysis (FBA) which consisted of the primary metabolic network of Arabidopsis thaliana (A. thaliana). The basic metabolic model involved 149 metabolites... more
    A stoichiometric model was developed for the application of metabolic flux balance analysis (FBA) which consisted of the primary metabolic network of Arabidopsis thaliana (A. thaliana). The basic metabolic model involved 149 metabolites and 178 reactions that represent the main carbon metabolism towards the formation of biomass. Assuming pseudo-steady state, mass balances were performed for each metabolite and the resulting equations were solved using linear optimization. The optimal metabolic flux distribution was determined in General Algebraic Modeling System (GAMS) 23.0 software by setting up the objective function as the maximization of biomass formation rate and using the constraints from batch experiments of A. thaliana suspended cell cultures. The results gave the theoretical maximum biological capacity of the cells to grow for a given specific uptake rate of sugar. The model proved to be a good starting point for more extended version of metabolism specifically for secondary metabolite production. Addition or extension of the model is feasible.
    Metabolic flux analysis was applied to Streptomyces coelicolor growth under nitrogen limitation with nitrate or ammonia as the nitrogen source. In all cases, maximum specific growth rates corresponding to the same specific glucose uptake... more
    Metabolic flux analysis was applied to Streptomyces coelicolor growth under nitrogen limitation with nitrate or ammonia as the nitrogen source. In all cases, maximum specific growth rates corresponding to the same specific glucose uptake rates were calculated in addition to the fluxes of some 200 metabolic reactions. Use of nitrate resulted in lower specific growth rates compared to ammonia. Excretion of some organic metabolites was observed in both limitation cases.
    SummaryA graphical method is described depicting the relationship between the physical oxygen transfer rate and microbial oxygen uptake rate in order to help determine the conditions under which growth will not be limited by oxygen.
    Abstract. A metabolic model was constructed in matrix formalism for the hydrogen production by the purple non-sulfur bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides involving 183 reactions and 153 metabolites. Assuming pseudo-steady state, mass balances... more
    Abstract. A metabolic model was constructed in matrix formalism for the hydrogen production by the purple non-sulfur bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides involving 183 reactions and 153 metabolites. Assuming pseudo-steady state, mass balances were performed for each metabolite and the resulting equations were solved using optimization. The objective function was the maximization of hydrogen production. The comparison of experimental and computational results indicated the importance of light in hydrogen production.
    Arabidopsis thaliana (A. thaliana) is a small weed which is related to the cabbage and mustard family. This flowering plant has been used widely as a model plant in genetics and molecular biology research since it is the first plant the... more
    Arabidopsis thaliana (A. thaliana) is a small weed which is related to the cabbage and mustard family. This flowering plant has been used widely as a model plant in genetics and molecular biology research since it is the first plant the full sequenced genome. Thus, A. thaliana literature provides plentiful information from genomics and transcriptomics point of view. However, there is still a lack of physiological information regarding its cell suspension cultures which can be powerful research tools in Plant Biotechnology and especially in Plant Systems and Synthetic Biology. In this study, cell growth and sugar uptake of A. thaliana Col ecotype grown in the continuous dark condition were modelled using the modified Monod and Michelis-menten equations. The model included sucrose hydrolysis by the cell-wall invertase enzyme into hexoses (glucose and fructose) and consumption of these hexoses at different rates to support cell growth. All kinetic model parameters were obtained from a ...
    The aim of this work was to investigate the interaction between E.coli and Streptomyces coelicolor A3 (2) for the increased production of undecylprodigiosin and identify the E. coli actives mediating this inter-species interaction. The... more
    The aim of this work was to investigate the interaction between E.coli and Streptomyces coelicolor A3 (2) for the increased production of undecylprodigiosin and identify the E. coli actives mediating this inter-species interaction. The antibiotics of interest were the red-pigmented undecylprodigiosin and blue-pigmented actinorhodin. Pure cultures of S. coelicolor in a defined medium produced higher concentrations of actinorhodin compared to those of undecylprodigiosin. The latter however, is more important due to its immunosuppressive and antitumor properties. As a strategy to increase undecylprodigiosin production, we added separately, live cells and heat-killed cells of E. coli C600, and the cell-free supernatant of E. coli culture to S. coelicolor cultures in shake flasks. The interaction with live cells of E. coli altered the antibiotic production pattern and undecylprodigiosin production was enhanced by 3.5-fold compared to the pure cultures of S. coelicolor and actinorhodin decreased by 15-fold. The heat-killed cells of E. coli however, had no effect on antibiotic production. In all cases, growth and glucose consumption of S. coelicolor remained almost the same as those observed in the pure culture indicating that the changes in antibiotic production were not due to nutritional stress. Results with cell-free supernatant of E. coli culture indicated that the interaction between S. coelicolor and E. coli was mediated via diffusible molecule(s). Using a set of extraction procedures and agar-well diffusion bioassays, we isolated and preliminarily identified a class of compounds. For the preliminary verification, we added the compound which was the common chemical structural moiety in this class of compounds to the pure S. coelicolor cultures. We observed similar effects on antibiotic production as with the live E. coli cells and their supernatant indicating that this class of compounds secreted by E. coli indeed could act as actives during interspecies interaction and increase the production of undecylprodigiosin.
    Scale-up has been one of the major problems in bioprocess technology. Earlier methods of trial-and-error have now been replaced by those which involve the understanding of the fundamental phenomena, at least for the simpler cases. For... more
    Scale-up has been one of the major problems in bioprocess technology. Earlier methods of trial-and-error have now been replaced by those which involve the understanding of the fundamental phenomena, at least for the simpler cases. For more complicated heterogeneous systems the employment of various rules of thumb is still widely practised. A summary of various strategies for bioreactor scale-up is given below.
    Plants have always provided food, fuel, food additives, drugs, pesticides, pigments, resins, perfumes and other important industrial, medicinal and agricultural raw materials. The techniques of plant, organ, tissue and cell culture have... more
    Plants have always provided food, fuel, food additives, drugs, pesticides, pigments, resins, perfumes and other important industrial, medicinal and agricultural raw materials. The techniques of plant, organ, tissue and cell culture have evolved since the beginning of this century and combined with recent advances in genetics and using conventional plant breeding, the plant biotechnology is having a significant impact on agriculture, horticulture and forestry. Some examples of the current applications in agriculture are micropropagation, somatic embryogenesis, virus and pathogen elimination, embryo rescue, germplasm storage and plant modification by somaclonal variation and genetic engineering. Another significant potential of plant biotechnology is in vitro production of fine chemicals using plant cell/organ cultures. However, there are several problems associated with such production technologies and the commercial processes are confined to a few examples, mainly in Japan. The whole field of plant biotechnology is expanding fast; with increased understanding of plant biochemistry, molecular biology, physiology and parallel developments in analytical sciences, instrumentation, bioreactor design and downstream processing the future can hold exciting possibilities.
    RESUMO As bactérias da classe dos streptomicetos são conhecidas por produzirem uma grande variedade de metabólitos secundários dentre eles antibióticos e antitumorais. Por isso é de grande interesse aumentar os níveis de produção desses... more
    RESUMO As bactérias da classe dos streptomicetos são conhecidas por produzirem uma grande variedade de metabólitos secundários dentre eles antibióticos e antitumorais. Por isso é de grande interesse aumentar os níveis de produção desses metabólitos. Os metabólitos secundários são sintetizados por rotas biosintéticas específicas, mas os precursores e co-fatores envolvidos nessas rotas são provenientes do metabolismo primário. O aumento no nível de produção de antibióticos em streptomicetos geralmente requer modificações do metabolismo primário, modificações estas que podem ser proposta por engenharia metabólica e obtidas por engenharia genética. Neste trabalho, através de simulações do modelo metabólico proposto, será mostrado como a regulação da expressão genética de genes envolvidos na biosíntese de ácidos graxos podem interferir nos níveis de produção de cosmomicina na cepa de Streptomyces olindensis ICB20.
    Some of the ideas presented at the panel discussion on engineering aspects of plant cell culture are brought together, with special emphasis on mass transfer problems and on the release of intracellular products by permeabilized cells.
    ABSTRACT The information needed for the biotic activities of an organism is stored in a coded form in its DNA. This code is universal for all organisms and uses three units called nucleotides, each of which can take one of four possible... more
    ABSTRACT The information needed for the biotic activities of an organism is stored in a coded form in its DNA. This code is universal for all organisms and uses three units called nucleotides, each of which can take one of four possible values to code for twenty different amino acids. Thus it is a mapping from N3 to P, where N is the set of nucleotides and P is the set of amino acids. The genetic code has been studied from the points of view of coding theory and information theory. Here we study it from the point of view of switching theory where it is considered as a logic function on a finite field and represented by its Reed-Muller expansion. We first present the genetic code, then develop its Reed-Muller expansion. Potential applications for this approach are also discussed.
    Cell immobilisation in pre-formed carriers involves passive/natural immobilisation usually in situ in the bioreactors or in the culture environment. Numerous inorganic and organic materials have been used as pre-formed carriers:... more
    Cell immobilisation in pre-formed carriers involves passive/natural immobilisation usually in situ in the bioreactors or in the culture environment. Numerous inorganic and organic materials have been used as pre-formed carriers: reticulated polyurethane and polyvinyl formal foam, other polymers, plastics, stainless steel, ceramic, glass, synthetic (ion exchange) resins, activated charcoal, aluminium oxide, diatomaceous earth, sand, cellulose, lignocellulose, cellulose acetate, and others. In this chapter however, only polyurethane foam, stainless steel knitted mesh, ceramic, glass and cellulose will be considered.
    ABSTRACT This study reports a novel method for embryo separation by cold treatment of heterogeneous suspension cultures which contain embryogenic single cells, cell clusters and embryos at various stages of development. The method was... more
    ABSTRACT This study reports a novel method for embryo separation by cold treatment of heterogeneous suspension cultures which contain embryogenic single cells, cell clusters and embryos at various stages of development. The method was applied to embryo suspension cultures of pepper (Capsicum annuum) and sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum). In both plants, single cells lost their viability dramatically over a few days while the viability of embryos remained above 95% for 25-30 days when kept at 5 °C. The effect of duration of cold treatment on embryo germination was also tested. The optimal duration of cold treatment was found to be 10 days for sugarcane and 21 days for pepper. After the cold treatment, the germination percentages were 90% and 96% for sugarcane and pepper, respectively.
    Summary An inoculum of initially freely suspended cell aggregates ofCapsicum frutescens was immobilised in porous polyurethane foam matrices. Subsequent growth and substrate consumption of these immobilised cells in batch culture were... more
    Summary An inoculum of initially freely suspended cell aggregates ofCapsicum frutescens was immobilised in porous polyurethane foam matrices. Subsequent growth and substrate consumption of these immobilised cells in batch culture were measured and compared with those of suspension cultures. The results showed that the maximum specific growth rate of freely suspended cells was slightly higher than that of immobilised cells
    Streptomyces coelicolor was immobilised "naturally" in porous support materials and its growth, glucose uptake and actinorhodin production were compared with freely suspended culture using defined and complex media. When... more
    Streptomyces coelicolor was immobilised "naturally" in porous support materials and its growth, glucose uptake and actinorhodin production were compared with freely suspended culture using defined and complex media. When the defined medium was used, the most pronounced difference between the two cultures was the accumulation of actinorhodin extracellularly in freely suspended and intracellularly in immobilised cultures. In the complex medium, however, actinorhodin was excreted by both cultures. In addition, the complex medium yielded 50 times as much actinorhodin compared to the defined medium. Further increases in product concentration were obtained by repeated batches of immobilised culture, which showed stability for at least 3 months.
    Perfluorodecalin, a perfluorocarbon (PFC), was used in this investigation as a dissolved oxygen carrier in the media of Streptomyces coelicolor cultures. The effects of different concentrations of PFC, PFC emulsified with pluronic F-68... more
    Perfluorodecalin, a perfluorocarbon (PFC), was used in this investigation as a dissolved oxygen carrier in the media of Streptomyces coelicolor cultures. The effects of different concentrations of PFC, PFC emulsified with pluronic F-68 and pluronic alone were investigated in the shake-flask cultures using both defined and complex media. In the defined medium with PFC alone, the maximum biomass and actinorhodin concentrations and the volumetric substrate consumption rates increased with increasing PFC concentration. They decreased dramatically, however, when the PFC concentration exceeded 50% (v/v). Emulsifying the PFC with pluronic F-68 resulted in a significant increase in antibiotic concentration while growth was unaffected. The inclusion of more than 4 g/l pluronic alone in the fermentation medium inhibited the growth. In the complex medium with 40% (v/v) PFC, although the final antibiotic concentration was unaffected, the onset of actinorhodin accumulation was 2 days earlier than that in the control. It was demonstrated that PFC and emulsified PFC did not have any deleterious effects on S. coelicolor cultures.
    Taxol is a cytotcxic diterpene initially isolated from the bark of Taxus brevifolia (Pacific yew). It has been approved for use in cancer treatment. Since total synthesis is uneconomical, plant biotechnology can provide an alternative... more
    Taxol is a cytotcxic diterpene initially isolated from the bark of Taxus brevifolia (Pacific yew). It has been approved for use in cancer treatment. Since total synthesis is uneconomical, plant biotechnology can provide an alternative source for the drug. Callus was initiated from needles of Taxus media on different media under different conditions of light. Cell immobilisation in polyurethane foam particles showed improved growth.
    A method has been devised which allows the rapid production of fine suspension cultures of small aggregate size from suspension cultures of large average aggregate size, such as those of Capsicum frutescens. The method, which uses a... more
    A method has been devised which allows the rapid production of fine suspension cultures of small aggregate size from suspension cultures of large average aggregate size, such as those of Capsicum frutescens. The method, which uses a Waring blender for aseptic homogenisation of cultures, has also been shown to be effective in rapidly producing suspension cultures from callus cultures. The suspension cultures so produced are particularly useful for immobilisation, such as in porous polyurethane foam matrices.
    Paclitaxel (Taxol), a cytotoxic diterpene initially isolated from the bark of Taxus brevifolia (Pacific yew), has been approved for cancer treatment. Since total chemical synthesis is not economical, plant biotechnology can offer an... more
    Paclitaxel (Taxol), a cytotoxic diterpene initially isolated from the bark of Taxus brevifolia (Pacific yew), has been approved for cancer treatment. Since total chemical synthesis is not economical, plant biotechnology can offer an alternative route for the production of this drug. Callus cultures were initiated from different explants of Taxus x media and Taxus cuspidata on various media using different
    A novel bioreactor has been designed to produce secondary metabolites from immobilised plant cell cultures (Mavituna et al, 1987). We have used the production of capsaicin, the hot chilli flavour, by Capsicum frutescens as a model system.... more
    A novel bioreactor has been designed to produce secondary metabolites from immobilised plant cell cultures (Mavituna et al, 1987). We have used the production of capsaicin, the hot chilli flavour, by Capsicum frutescens as a model system. This is a particularly suitable system for an immobilised cell process since capsaicin is excreted into the liquid medium.
    Metabolic flux analysis was applied to Streptomyces coelicolor continuous culture data obtained under nitrogen, phosphate, sulfate, and potassium limitations. The metabolic reaction network involved more than 200 reactions describing the... more
    Metabolic flux analysis was applied to Streptomyces coelicolor continuous culture data obtained under nitrogen, phosphate, sulfate, and potassium limitations. The metabolic reaction network involved more than 200 reactions describing the major pathways as well as the secondary metabolism for the production of actinorhodin and excretion of certain metabolites. Linear programming was used for the optimization of specific growth rates and energy requirements. Two types of specific growth rates, stoichiometric and theoretical, were defined, maximized, and compared in order to investigate the microbial potential. Potassium limitation led to the largest and nitrogen limitation to the smallest difference between the stoichiometric and theoretical specific growth rates. Although the value of the maximum theoretical specific growth rate was close to that of the experimental specific growth rate with potassium limitation, this difference was the largest in the case of nitrogen limitation. Energy requirements during different nutrient limitations were also investigated. The model indicated that although the highest actinorhodin production rate was with nitrogen limitation, this was accompanied with the undesired excretion of certain metabolites.
    The techniques of plant organ, tissue and cell culture have evolved over several decades (Table 1). These techniques combined with recent advances in developmental, cellular and molecular genetics and using conventional plant breeding... more
    The techniques of plant organ, tissue and cell culture have evolved over several decades (Table 1). These techniques combined with recent advances in developmental, cellular and molecular genetics and using conventional plant breeding have turned plant biotechnology into an exciting research field with significant impact on agriculture, horticulture and forestry. There has also been a growing interest in the use of suspension and immobilised plant cell cultures and organ cultures for the production of fine chemicals and some specific biotransformation reactions.
    This chapter summarizes the fundamentals of metabolic flux balancing as a computational tool of metabolic engineering and systems biology. It also presents examples from the literature for its applications in medicine. These examples... more
    This chapter summarizes the fundamentals of metabolic flux balancing as a computational tool of metabolic engineering and systems biology. It also presents examples from the literature for its applications in medicine. These examples involve mainly liver metabolism and antibiotic production. Metabolic flux balancing is a computational method for the determination of metabolic pathway fluxes through a stoichiometric model of the cellular pathways, using mass balances for intracellular metabolites. It is a powerful tool to study metabolism under normal and abnormal conditions with a view to engineer the metabolism. Its extended potential in medicine is emphasized in the future trends.
    Somatic embryo suspension cultures of Picea sitchensis (Sitka spruce) derived from two cell lines, SS03 and SS10, were grown in shake flasks, air-lift, bubble, stirred tank and hanging stirrer bar bioreactors. Cell line SS03 yielded... more
    Somatic embryo suspension cultures of Picea sitchensis (Sitka spruce) derived from two cell lines, SS03 and SS10, were grown in shake flasks, air-lift, bubble, stirred tank and hanging stirrer bar bioreactors. Cell line SS03 yielded freely suspended and individual stage 1 embryos, while the embryos of SS10 were present in large aggregates. Compared to shake flasks, proliferation in bioreactors resulted
    ... 196 L M. Tamer, E Mavituna Callus initiation The sterilised leaves were cut into slices and these explants were transferred to Petri dishes containing basal ... The flasks were placed on an orbitalshaker (Infors Ag Ch-4103,... more
    ... 196 L M. Tamer, E Mavituna Callus initiation The sterilised leaves were cut into slices and these explants were transferred to Petri dishes containing basal ... The flasks were placed on an orbitalshaker (Infors Ag Ch-4103, Bottmingen) at 120 rpm and 25 using a 12 h light/12 h ...
    ABSTRACT Fed-batch fermentations of Streptomyces coelicolor in chemically defined medium in a 20 litre bioreactor were used to produce actinorhodin. Concentrated solutions of phosphate and nitrate with or without glucose were fed... more
    ABSTRACT Fed-batch fermentations of Streptomyces coelicolor in chemically defined medium in a 20 litre bioreactor were used to produce actinorhodin. Concentrated solutions of phosphate and nitrate with or without glucose were fed intermittently or continuously. Continuous feeding of glucose alone was found to be the best strategy for actinorhodin production. In this case, the specific productivity was almost twice that obtained in conventional batch fermentation.
    ... Biotechnology and Bioengineer-ing, 1972, 14, 587-608. Rols, JL, Condoret, JS, Fonade, C. and Goma, G., Mechanism of enhanced oxygen transfer fer-mentation using emulsified oxygen vectors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 1990, 35,... more
    ... Biotechnology and Bioengineer-ing, 1972, 14, 587-608. Rols, JL, Condoret, JS, Fonade, C. and Goma, G., Mechanism of enhanced oxygen transfer fer-mentation using emulsified oxygen vectors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 1990, 35, 427-435. References. ...
    ABSTRACT A perfluorocarbon was used alone and emulsified with pluronic F-68 to carry oxygen to immobilised Streptomyces coelicolor cultures. The final biomass concentrations obtained decreased with increasing perfluorocarbon... more
    ABSTRACT A perfluorocarbon was used alone and emulsified with pluronic F-68 to carry oxygen to immobilised Streptomyces coelicolor cultures. The final biomass concentrations obtained decreased with increasing perfluorocarbon concentration. The maximum antibiotic concentration achieved and volumetric glucose consumption rate increased with increasing perfluorocarbon concentration. Both decreased, however, when the perfluorocarbon concentration exceeded 40% (v/v). The use of 10% perfluorocarbon emulsified with pluronic F-68 resulted in both operational stability and approximately double the antibiotic concentration compared to the control and 10% perfluorocarbon (v/v) without pluronic. It seems that the activity of immobilised cells can be improved by additional oxygen supplied with perfluorocarbon or its emulsion.
    ABSTRACT
    In this study, the effect of an oxygen carrier, perfluorocarbon, on actinorhodin fermentation by Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) was investigated using a chemically defined medium in 2 and 20l bioreactors. The inclusion of 50% (v/v)... more
    In this study, the effect of an oxygen carrier, perfluorocarbon, on actinorhodin fermentation by Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) was investigated using a chemically defined medium in 2 and 20l bioreactors. The inclusion of 50% (v/v) perfluorocarbon in the fermentation medium resulted in a five-fold increase in the maximum antibiotic concentration. The use of perfluorocarbon also caused remarkable increases in both glucose
    ABSTRACT
    Suspension cultures of Daucus carota L. were established, and cells with embryogenic potential were separated from those without by density gradient centrifugation in Ficoll at different stages in the growth curve. In order to obtain... more
    Suspension cultures of Daucus carota L. were established, and cells with embryogenic potential were separated from those without by density gradient centrifugation in Ficoll at different stages in the growth curve. In order to obtain information about the electrical properties of individual cells, electrorotation spectra of single plant cells from different fractions were measured before and after induction of embryogenesis. The data were analysed using models based on Maxwell–Wagner's theories of interfacial polarisation. It was found that the denser cells had a higher embryogenic potential, a darker appearance and a higher internal conductivity (>1 S m-1) than the less dense cells, which had less or no embryogenic potential and a lower internal conductivity (-1). Modelling the dielectrophoretic (DEP) response on the basis of the electrorotation data suggested that separation of cells with high embryogenic potential may be achievable in the frequency range 1–10 MHz. Actual ...