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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2005, p. 3007-3013, Vol. 71, No. 6
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.6.3007-3013.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Chemistry and Bioscience, Molecular Biotechnology, Lundberg Laboratory, Chalmers University of Technology, Box 462, SE-405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden
Received 8 July 2004/ Accepted 21 December 2004
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Studies of the starvation response of aerobically grown cells have shown that the growth history prior to starvation is an important variable (20, 22). Cells in stationary phase are generally more tolerant to osmotic stress or heat stress than are cells in the logarithmic-growth phase (3, 32). In aerobic studies of starvation for a single nutrient in an otherwise complete medium, carbon starvation is better tolerated than nitrogen starvation (9, 21). The lack of tolerance for nitrogen starvation could result from degradation of the glucose uptake system in cells starved for nitrogen in the presence of a fermentable carbon source (4). However, even in the presence of a nonfermentable carbon source, e.g., ethanol instead of glucose, there was a greater decrease in fermentative capacity during nitrogen starvation than during carbon starvation (21).
Storage carbohydrate accumulation also affects starvation tolerance. Trehalose and glycogen accumulate in response to nutrient limitation (5) and may be found in large amounts during starvation for nitrogen in the presence of a carbon source (14). In chemostats, storage carbohydrates accumulate in carbon-limited cultures at low dilution rates and low glycolytic flux (11). However, if the glycolytic flux is increased by imposing nitrogen limitation or by the addition of weak organic acids, then the storage carbohydrate content of the cells will diminish (11).
Trehalose is a stress protectant of proteins and cell membranes (1, 10, 27, 33) and is important for the quality and viability of baker's yeast (23, 26). The inability to produce trehalose and glycogen before a starvation period results in lower viability (26), and cells whose intracellular trehalose content was increased by the addition of extracellular trehalose had a higher starvation tolerance (23).
The starvation response of cells grown under anaerobic conditions is different from the response of aerobically grown cells (29). Anaerobically grown logarithmic-phase cells subjected to a sudden carbon starvation period have a reduction in fermentative capacity and a rapid drop in ATP immediately after harvest that lasts through the starvation period. Cells from the same growth conditions that are starved for nitrogen also had severely reduced fermentative capacity but maintained their initial ATP levels. The lack of fermentative capacity following carbon starvation could not be explained by the absence of glucose transport capacity. We previously suggested that during carbon starvation the cells rapidly lost their energy reserves and were not able to adapt successfully to starvation conditions (29).
Industrial fermentation based on wheat hydrolysate (for example) frequently becomes nitrogen limited (24). Due to both a low and variable homogeneity of large-scale fermenters, there may even be times when cells encounter a starvation situation. For example, nitrogen limitation-starvation can result in so-called stuck fermentation (2, 24). Furthermore, the logistics of the propagation procedure may involve starvation conditions, e.g., when cells are stored in a NaCl solution before being inoculated in the subsequent step. Lactic acid is also a common stress factor under industrial conditions, due to contamination of the fermentation by lactic acid bacteria (18). Weak organic acids are believed to enter the cell by crossing the membrane in their undissociated form. The proportion of dissociated and undissociated acid depends on the pH and the pKa of the acid.
Our objective in this study was to evaluate the response to a sudden anaerobic starvation with respect to fermentative capacity in cells cultivated under carbon or nitrogen limitation and with or without lactic acid. Nutrient limitation and weak organic acids affect the rate of fermentation, which in turn affects endogenous energy reserves. Understanding the consequences of the anaerobic starvation response is needed to develop and implement an optimized ethanol production process and to maintain a productive yeast population.
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Cultivation setup.
A chemostat culture with a working volume of 1.5 liter and a constant dilution rate of 0.1 h1 was prepared in a 2 l Braun Biostat A fermentor (Braun, Melsungen, Germany). The temperature was kept constant at 30°C, and the stirring rate was 500 rpm. The pH was kept at either 3.25 or 5.0 by the automatic addition of 1 or 2 M NaOH. Anaerobic conditions were maintained with a continuous N2 gas flow through the fermentor at a rate of 500 ml/min. The gas flow was controlled by a mass flow controller (Bronkhorst High-Tech B.V., Ruurlo, The Netherlands).
Batch cultures were used to start the chemostat. Cells were cultivated on a yeast extract-peptone-glucose plate for 48 h at 30°C and then in a 300-ml shake flask containing 100 ml of complete medium with 1% glucose for 24 h at 30°C and 200 rpm. The fermentor contained 2 liter of complete medium and was inoculated with 2 ml of the preculture. The feed of fresh substrate was started shortly after entry into stationary-phase, following glucose depletion, as indicated by the CO2 production rate.
Steady-state criteria.
Constant CO2 production after at least three residence periods was used as the criterion for a steady-state fermentation. Exhaust gas was monitored continuously with a gas analyzer (Brüel & Kjær, Nærum, Denmark). The different steady-state conditions were achieved following successive changes in the substrate reservoir. First, the lactic acid concentration was increased from 0 to 90 and finally to 280 mM at pH 5. Then, the pH was reduced to 3.25 and the lactic acid level was reduced successively from 280 to 90 and 0 mM. Finally, the pH was reset to 5, and 5 mM benzoic acid was added. The first seven steady states were run under carbon-limiting conditions and the following seven were run under nitrogen-limiting conditions.
Starvation protocol.
The starvation media were identical to the growth medium, except that carbon starvation was performed in the absence of glucose and nitrogen starvation was performed in the absence of ammonium sulfate. Samples of 20 to 125 ml were taken in duplicate for each starvation condition at steady state from the same fermentor. The volume of the sample depended on the dry weight (wt/vol) of the fermentor culture at the particular growth condition. The cells were centrifuged at 4,000 x g for 5 min at 25°C and washed once in the starvation medium to be studied (either carbon or nitrogen starvation medium). Cells were resuspended in 100 ml of starvation medium, resulting in an initial dry weight concentration at the beginning of starvation of approximately 1 g (wt/vol) per liter. The subsequent 24-h anaerobic incubation was performed with anaerobic 100-ml shake flasks (28).
Measurement of fermentative capacity.
Fermentative capacity was measured as the ethanol production rate before and after starvation in a medium identical to the growth medium but without a nitrogen source (ergosterol-Tween 80) and with a glucose concentration of 10 g/liter. The nitrogen source was omitted to avoid de novo protein synthesis during the test. For unstarved cells, 5 to 25 ml of duplicate samples, depending on dry weight, were sampled and harvested by centrifugation at 4,000 x g for 5 min at 25°C. After being washed once in the fermentative capacity test medium, the cells were resuspended in 50 ml test medium in 250-ml shake flasks, resulting in a final cell density of approximately 0.5 g (dry weight)/liter. The cells were incubated at 30°C on a shaker at 200 rpm, and glucose was added to a final concentration of 10 g/liter. Extracellular samples (1 ml) were taken every 10 min by centrifugation for 1 min at 16,000 x g. The supernatant was collected and frozen in liquid N2 and stored at 20°C. Ethanol was analyzed enzymatically with kits from Boehringer-Mannheim GmbH (Mannheim, Germany). To measure the fermentative capacity of the starved cells, 25 ml of the starvation culture was sampled, and the cells were washed and resuspended as indicated above. The ethanol production capacity of starved cells was normalized to the dry weight of the culture at the onset of starvation.
Glucose uptake capacity experiments.
Glucose uptake capacity was measured as previously described (31) with minor modifications. Approximately 25 ml of the starved culture was centrifuged for 5 min at 4,000 x g and washed twice with growth medium lacking both a carbon and a nitrogen source. The pellet was resuspended in 4 ml of medium lacking the carbon and nitrogen source and kept on ice until measurement. Immediately before measurement, the cells were transferred to a 30°C water bath for 4 min and flushed with N2. From the flushed-cell suspension, 50 µl was transferred and mixed with 12.5 µl solution containing 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) and 14C-labeled glucose to a final concentration of 50 mM. The activity was 60 µCi/ml. The mixture was incubated for 5 s, and glucose uptake was quenched by transferring 50 µl of the mixture to 10 ml of ice-cold quench buffer containing 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) and 500 mM unlabeled glucose maintained at or below 5°C in a salt-ice bath. The cells were collected by filtration on glass fiber filters and washed twice with 2 x 10 ml of quench buffer. Radioactivity was determined with a Beckman (Fullerton, California) liquid scintillator counter (LS6000LL). Five determinations were made for each starvation culture.
Protein determination.
Duplicates of 150 µl each were mixed with an equal volume of 2 M NaOH, frozen in liquid N2, and stored at 20°C. The proteins were hydrolyzed by being boiled for 15 min and centrifuged at 16,000 x g at 4°C for 15 min. Total protein in the supernatant was measured as described by Lowry (15) with bovine serum albumin as the standard.
Determination of intracellular ATP.
Duplicate 1-ml samples were taken, and ATP was extracted by the addition of 1.2 ml of 0.51 M trichloroacetic acid (6). The analysis was carried out with the CLSII ATP bioluminiscence assay kit (Boehringer-Mannheim GmbH) on a Pico-Lite luminometer (Packard Instruments, Downers Grove, Illinois).
Determination of trehalose and glycogen.
Duplicate samples of 35 to 50 mg (dry weight) of unstarved cells or 10 to 50 mg (dry weight) of starved cells were taken. The cells were centrifuged for 5 min at 4,000 x g at 4°C and washed twice in cold 0.9% NaCl. The pellet was frozen in liquid N2, kept at 20°C, and analyzed as previously described (29). The content of storage carbohydrates was normalized to the cell dry weight of the same culture.
Determination of dry weight.
Samples (2 x 5 or 2 x 10 ml) were centrifuged in dried, tared conical glass tubes for 5 min at 2,300 x g and washed twice with deionized water. Pellets were dried in the tubes for 24 h at 110°C, stored in a desiccator until cooled to room temperature, and then weighed.
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TABLE 1. Fermentative capacity before and after carbon or nitrogen starvationd with performance of a statistical analysis using Student's two-sample t test (P = 0.01)e
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Glucose uptake capacity of starved cells.
In general, cells grown at pH 5, irrespective of carbon or nitrogen limitation during growth, had similar glucose uptake capacities after starvation when carbon- and nitrogen-starved cells were compared (Table 2). At pH 3.25, the presence of lactic acid during growth under carbon- and nitrogen-limiting conditions reduced glucose uptake capacity after carbon starvation. However, most nitrogen-limited cells subjected to carbon starvation (resulting in a fermentative capacity close to zero) retained substantial glucose uptake capacity (Table 2).
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TABLE 2. Glucose uptake capacity at a glucose concentration of 50 mM (9 g/liter) after carbon or nitrogen starvation of cells grown in a chemostat,e with a statistical analysis using Student's two-sample t test performedf
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TABLE 3. Intracellular levels of glycogen and trehalose in unstarved, carbon-starved, or nitrogen-starved cells,f with a statistical analysis using Student's two-sample t testg
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FIG. 1. Glycogen content before starvation (percentage of dry weight) versus fermentative capacity (FC, millimoles per gram per hour) after carbon starvation (A) and nitrogen starvation (B). Growth and starvation conditions are indicated by the following symbols: , carbon-limited growth followed by carbon starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth followed by carbon starvation; , carbon-limited growth followed by nitrogen starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth followed by nitrogen starvation; , carbon-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid followed by carbon starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid followed by carbon starvation; , carbon-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid, followed by nitrogen starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid, followed by nitrogen starvation. Error bars indicate standard deviation when >10% of the value of the point. The error bars for glycogen content indicate standard deviation, calculated from two separately analyzed samples originating from the same fermenter cultivation. The error bars for fermentative capacity indicate standard deviation from two separately starved cultures originating from the same fermenter cultivation. The lines are linear regressions (samples with benzoic acid were omitted) with R2 = 0.94 (A) and R2 = 0.001 (B), respectively.
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0.1 µmol/g (Fig. 2A). Nitrogen starvation did not result in a drastic or systematic reduction in ATP content, and glycogen accumulation and ATP content after nitrogen starvation were not correlated (R2 = 0.10) (Fig. 2B).
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FIG. 2. Glycogen content (percentage of dry weight) versus ATP level (in micromoles per gram [dry weight]) after carbon starvation (A) and nitrogen starvation (B). Growth and starvation conditions are indicated by the following symbols: , carbon-limited growth followed by carbon starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth followed by carbon starvation; , carbon-limited growth followed by nitrogen starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth followed by nitrogen starvation; , carbon-limited in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid followed by carbon starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid followed by carbon starvation; , carbon-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid, followed by nitrogen starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid, followed by nitrogen starvation. Error bars indicate standard deviation when >10% of the value of the point. The error bars for glycogen content indicate standard deviation, calculated from two separately analyzed samples originating from the same fermenter cultivation. The error bars for ATP levels indicate standard deviation from the level measured in two separately starved cultures originating from the same fermenter cultivation. The lines are linear regressions (samples with benzoic acid were omitted) with R2 = 0.69 (A) and R2 = 0.10 (B), respectively.
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FIG. 3. ATP levels (micromoles per gram[dry weight] of cells) versus fermentative capacity (FC; in millimoles per gram per hour) after carbon and nitrogen starvation. Growth and starvation conditions are indicated by the following symbols: , carbon-limited growth followed by carbon starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth followed by carbon starvation; , carbon-limited growth followed by nitrogen starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth followed by nitrogen starvation; , carbon-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid followed by carbon starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid followed by carbon starvation; , carbon-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid, followed by nitrogen starvation; , nitrogen-limited growth in the presence of 5 mM benzoic acid, followed by nitrogen starvation. Error bars indicate standard deviation when >10% of the mean value of the point. The error bars for the ATP levels indicate standard deviation from the level, measured in two separately starved cultures originating from the same fermenter cultivation. The error bars for fermentative capacity indicate standard deviation from two separately starved cultures originating from the same fermenter cultivation. The trend line shown is a polynomial of the third order in the interval between 0 to 4 µmol/g of ATP. The correlation factor (R2) was 0.75.
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4 mM. |
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The almost complete lack of fermentative capacity in response to externally added glucose by nitrogen-limited cells subjected to carbon starvation cannot be explained simply by reductions in glucose uptake capacity. Glucose uptake capacity after starvation was very similar for both carbon and nitrogen starvation at each respective previous growth condition, except for growth at a pH of 3.25 with high concentrations of lactic acid. Under the latter conditions, both carbon- and nitrogen- limited cells had less glucose uptake capacity following carbon starvation than they did following nitrogen starvation. However, glucose uptake capacity remained in these cells. Thus, lack of glucose uptake capacity does not explain the effect of carbon starvation on cells previously grown under nitrogen limitation.
One hypothesis to explain the inability of anaerobic cells to cope with a sudden carbon starvation could be a rapid depletion of ATP (29). For example, cells growing exponentially in anaerobic batch cultures subjected to carbon starvation were rapidly depleted of their ATP and also lost fermentative capacity (29). Consistent with these earlier results, we found that a high-glycogen content preserved fermentative capacity during carbon starvation and that it also prevented the cells from becoming ATP depleted. Thus, successful adaptation to starvation requires energy; in the absence of an extracellular energy source(s), endogenous energy reserves are required to provide the cells with energy in the form of ATP. Even though the cells were supplied with an external energy source, e.g., glucose (during the fermentation capacity test), after carbon starvation they could not catabolize it. We interpret these results to mean that a minimum amount of ATP is needed internally to initiate glucose degradation. This general effect was demonstrated previously by testing the effect of different ATP concentrations on the glycolytic flux of permeabilized cells of S. cerevisiae (13). The intracellular ATP is probably required for the phosphorylation of glucose and fructose-6-phosphate by hexokinase and phosphofructokinase, respectively, both of which act in glycolysis before ATP production begins (13).
The starvation tolerance/response for anaerobic conditions is different from that for cells growing under aerobic conditions. In aerobically grown cells, nitrogen starvation usually provokes a more drastic reduction in catabolic capacity than does carbon starvation (9, 12, 21). In addition, a high level of storage carbohydrates is not required to preserve fermentative capacity during carbon starvation under aerobic conditions (21). These differences can, at least in part, be explained by differences in the range of substrates that can be utilized for energy generation under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Aerobically, lipids, proteins, amino acids, etc., are all potential substrates, but anaerobically, energy generation is limited to the fermentation of carbohydrates. Access to energy will be important for successful adaptation to starvation conditions since this adaptation requires protein synthesis, the most energy-expensive process in the cell.
Cells grown in the presence of benzoic acid are more tolerant of carbon starvation than expected, given the relatively low-storage-carbohydrate content of the cells prior to starvation (Fig. 1A). Thus, exposure to one kind of stress, e.g., a weak acid stress, may induce increased tolerance to another type of stress, e.g., starvation. The fact that one kind of mild stress might improve the ability to withstand a different more severe type of stress is well known (7). To conclude, successful adaptation to sudden carbon starvation requires access to intracellular energy in the form of ATP; under anaerobic conditions, this requires fermentable endogenous energy resources such as glycogen. The practical implications of these results are that aeration during propagation is not only advantageous for obtaining a high cell yield but also for making the cells more tolerant of carbon starvation. As large, nonaerated fermenters are often not homogenous, it is crucially important to avoid zones of carbon source depletion in which cell performance will be reduced.
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