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Effects of the Coculture Initiation Method on the Production of Secondary Metabolites in Bioreactor Cocultures of Penicillium rubens and Streptomyces rimosus

Tomasz Boruta, Anna Ścigaczewska, Agnieszka Ruda, Marcin Bizukojć

2023Molecules13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bioreactor cocultures involving Penicillium rubens and Streptomyces rimosus were investigated with regard to secondary metabolite production, morphological development, dissolved oxygen levels, and carbon substrate utilization. The production profiles of 22 secondary metabolites were analyzed, including penicillin G and oxytetracycline. Three inoculation approaches were tested, i.e., the simultaneous inoculation of P. rubens with S. rimosus and the inoculation of S. rimosus delayed by 24 or 48 h relative to P. rubens. The delayed inoculation of S. rimosus into the P. rubens culture did not prevent the actinomycete from proliferating and displaying its biosynthetic repertoire. Although a period of prolonged adaptation was needed, S. rimosus exhibited growth and the production of secondary metabolites regardless of the chosen delay period (24 or 48 h). This promising method of coculture initiation resulted in increased levels of metabolites tentatively identified as rimocidin B, 2-methylthio-cis-zeatin, chrysogine, benzylpenicilloic acid, and preaustinoid D relative to the values recorded for the monocultures. This study demonstrates the usefulness of the delayed inoculation approach in uncovering the metabolic landscape of filamentous microorganisms and altering the levels of secondary metabolites.

Topics & Concepts

Secondary metaboliteSecondary metabolismMetaboliteInoculationPenicilliumBioreactorMicrobiologyBiologyPrimary metaboliteMetabolismBiochemistryFood scienceMicroorganismChemistryBotanyBiosynthesisBacteriaEnzymeHorticultureGeneticsGeneMicrobial Natural Products and BiosynthesisFungal Biology and ApplicationsMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction
Effects of the Coculture Initiation Method on the Production of Secondary Metabolites in Bioreactor Cocultures of Penicillium rubens and Streptomyces rimosus | Litcius