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Download fileProduct Diversity Linked to Substrate Usage in Chain Elongation by Mixed-Culture Fermentation
dataset
posted on 2016-05-10, 00:00 authored by Marta Coma, Ramiro Vilchez-Vargas, Hugo Roume, Ruy Jauregui, Dietmar H. Pieper, Korneel RabaeyAcetate
and ethanol can be converted to caproic acid by microorganisms
through reverse β-oxidation. There is limited insight into the
versatility of chain elongation in view of different starting substrates,
including even- and odd-carbon carboxylates and alcohols other than
ethanol. Thermodynamic analyses show that most elongation pathways
are energetically feasible. Through incubations of microbial communities
with different substrate-pair combinations, we established that ethanol
and propanol were both highly suitable for chain elongation. As an
electron acceptor, acetate, propionate, and butyrate readily elongated
with ethanol, whereas an adaptation period was necessary for formate.
Isobutyrate and longer-chained fatty acids above butyrate were not
elongated. The microbial communities converged, and consistent enrichment
of Clostridium spp. was observed, independent
of the supplied alcohol or carboxylate, with a strain related to Clostridium kluyveri dominating the enrichments.
Community analysis also showed phylotypes related to Bacteroidaceae
and Microbacteriaceae families in all tests that are capable of converting
the base substrates to useful intermediates. These organisms were
mainly enriched with methanol or formate. Our overall conclusion is
thus that multiple substrates can be used for chain elongation and
that this process is carried out by highly similar organisms for direct
chain elongation irrespective of the substrate.