Abstract

Clostridium beijerinckii ("Clostridium butylicum") NRRL B592 and NRRL B593 were grown in batch cultures without pH control. The use of more sensitive and accurate procedures for the determination of solvents in cultures led to the recognition of the onset of solvent production about 2 h earlier than the previously assigned point and at a higher culture pH for both strains. Reliable assays for solvent-forming enzyme activities in cell extracts have also been developed. The results showed that activities of solvent-forming enzymes in strain NRRL B592 started to increase about 1 h before the measured onset of solvent production and that the increase in activities of solvent-forming enzymes was not simultaneous. The degree of increase of these enzyme activities for both strains ranged from 2- to 165-fold, with acetoacetate decarboxylase and butanol-isopropanol dehydrogenase showing the largest activity increases. However, the pattern of increase of enzyme activities differed significantly in the two strains of C. beijerinckii. When an increase in solvent-forming enzyme activities was first detected in strain NRRL B592, the culture pH was at 5.7 and the concentrations of total acetic and butyric acids were 5.2 and 3.6 mM, respectively. For strain NRRL B593, the corresponding pH was 5.5. Thus, the culture conditions immediately preceding the expression of solvent-forming enzyme activities differed significantly from those that have been correlated with the production of solvents at later stages of growth.

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