Abstract
During semicontinuous culture, a sample of fixed volume is removed at regular time intervals to make measurements and/or harvest culture components, and an equal volume of fresh medium is immediately added to the culture, thereby instantaneously enhancing nutrient concentrations and diluting cell concentration. The resulting cell concentration versus time curve (i.e., the actual cell growth curve) has a saw-toothed appearance because of the periodic dilution of cell concentration. The observed cell concentrations correspond to the peaks of the saw-toothed curve. Cell growth rates are estimated from the locus of observed cell concentrations (i.e., from the apparent growth curve obtained by connecting the peaks of the saw-toothed curve). The sole preexisting model (Fencl's mode) for estimating cell growth rate is valid only when the cells are growing exponentially at a constant rate between samplings. This model has limited validity: despite the periodic enhancement of nutrient concentration, cell growth between samplings eventually causes nutrient depletion, and the cells cease to grow exponentially. Failure to recognize the limits of validity for Fencl' model has resulted in many erroneous applications of the model and, consequently, many incorrect estimates of cell growth rates. To provide a means for correctly estimating cell growth rates, Fencl's exponential model was extended, and a new model that describes the effects of nutrient depletion on cell growth in semi-continuous culture was obtained. The new model shows that exhaustion of a single growth-limiting nutrient in semicontinuous culture causes the locus of cell concentrations observed at time intervals of Deltat to follow a logistic growth curve. The actual cell growth rate was shown to equal the apparent logistic growth rate plus the effective dilution rate -Deltat(-1) In (1 - f), where f is the ratio of sample volume to total culture volume. Moreover, the model predicts that both the apparent logistic growth rate and the apparent steady-state cell concentration should rise linearly with the concentration of growth-limiting nutrient in the input medium, but fall linearly with increases in the effective dilution rate. The new logistic model for nutrient-limited cell growth in semicontinuous culture was successfully tested using published data for Asterionella formosa, Cyclotella meneghiniana, Daucus carota, and strain L mouse cells.
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