Abstract

The effects of citrate on diacetyl, acetoin and 2,3-butylene glycol (2,3-BG) production by Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. cremoris grown in continuous culture at pH 5.2 were studied. In glucose alone end-product production agreed with the theoretical stoichiometry. In the presence of citrate, lactate and acetate production was higher than the theoretical stoichiometry from glucose. Lactate production was constant when the initial citrate concentration was increased whereas ethanol production strongly decreased. In the absence of citrate, citrate lyase (CL) exhibited weak activity. Diacetyl reductase (DR) and acetoin reductase (AR) exhibited basal activity. When varying citrate concentrations ranging from 10 to 75 mm were added to glucose broth, DR, AR, lactate dehydrogenase, NADH oxidase and alcohol dehydrogenase decreased as the initial citrate concentration increased suggesting that they were partly repressed by citrate. In contrast, CL increased and the specific citrate utilization rate also increased in the same way, indicating no saturation of the first step of citrate metabolism. Acetate kinase (AK) was slightly higher in the presence of citrate and increased when the initial citrate concentration increased. This result was correlated with an increase of acetate from the acetyl phosphate pathway. More ATP was produced in the presence of citrate, which could explain the increase in biomass formation. Citrate bioconversion into diacetyl, acetoin and 2,3-BG increased as the initial citrate increased.

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