Trehalose accumulation from cassava starch and release by a highly thermosensitive and permeable mutant of Saccharomycopsis fibuligera.
Nøgleord
Abstrakt
Highly thermosensitive and permeable mutants are the mutants from which intracellular contents can be released when they are incubated both in low osmolarity water and at non-permissive temperature (usually 37°C). After mutagenesis by using nitrosoguanidine, a highly thermosensitive and permeable mutant named A11-b was obtained from Saccharomycopsis fibuligera A11-12, a trehalose overproducer in which the acid protease gene has been disrupted. Of the total trehalose, 73.8% was released from the mutant cells suspended in distilled water after they had been treated at 37°C overnight. However, only 10.0% of the total trehalose was released from the cells of S. fibuligera A11-12 treated under the same conditions. The cell volume of the mutant cells suspended in distilled water and treated at 37°C overnight was much bigger than that of S. fibuligera A11-12 treated under the same conditions. The cell growth and trehalose accumulation of the mutant were almost the same as those of S. fibuligera A11-12 during the cultivation at the flask level and in a 5-l fermentor. Both could accumulate around 28.0% (w/w) trehalose from cassava starch. After purification, the trehalose crystal from the aqueous extract of the mutant was obtained.