Abstract

The bioconversion of linoleic acid (LA) to conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) was investigated to examine LA-adaptation ofBifidobacterium breve KCTC 3461 to additions of 1 to 5 mg/mL of LA overtime. To induce LA-adaptation,B. breve KCTC 3461 was treated with LA, according to three schemes. For LA-adaptedB. breve the maximum concentration of CLA, 300–350 μg/mL, was obtained in cys-MRS medium containing 1 mg/mL of LA. The CLA production significantly increased with increasing LA concentration, from 1 to 4 mg/mL, but the conversion of LA to CLA gradually decreased. The CLA production capability ofB. breve, and its tolerance, improved significantly with LA-adaptation. The addition of LA (1 mg/mL) into the culture broth after 24 h of cultivation in a 100-mL media bottle was most effective at promoting CLA production. In a 2.5-L stirred-tank bioreactor, the observed conversion and productivity of 56.6% and 35.4 μgml−1h−1, respectively, by LA-adaptedB. breve were approximately 6.6 and 9.8 times higher than those of LA-unadaptedB. breve.

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