Abstract

A novel reactor system, the rotating disk bioreactor (RDBR), was used to mimic the niche environmental conditions of three salt-tolerant estuarine actinobacteria isolated from the Sundarbans region off the Bay of Bengal, designated MS310 (99% similar in its 16S rRNA gene sequence to Streptomyces parvallus), MS3/20 and MS1/7. The RDBR, operated at a rotational speed of one revolution per day, 50% submergence of discs, aeration rate of 1.0 vvm, and with a sucrose-containing medium, faithfully mimicked the intertidal estuarine habitat of these marine isolates, and supported biofilm formation and production of antimicrobial metabolites-in particular, actinomycin D by MS310. Onset of antibiotic production by MS310 occurs at 20 h in the RDBR compared to 55 h in a conventional stirred-tank bioreactor (STBR). Furthermore, peak antimicrobial activity is attained much earlier in the RDBR with MS310 (at 45 h) than that reported with a terrestrial strain of S. parvallus grown in a STBR (at 144 h). Peak antimicrobial activity of metabolites produced by MS1/7 and MS3/20 were also attained earlier in the RDBR (at 25 and 12 h, respectively) than in a STBR (at 80 and 28 h, respectively). Antibiotic synthesis in the three isolates, in general, appears to be associated with their growth. Overall, the RDBR may be considered the preferred alternative to the STBR for production of antimicrobials by biofilm-forming estuarine bacteria for its much higher surface/volume ratio, lower costs, and easy operability.

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