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Effect of simulated microgravity and shear stress on microcin B17 production by Escherichia coli and on its excretion into the mediumProduction of the antibacterial polypeptide microcin B17 (MccB17) by Escherichia coli ZK650 was inhibited by simulated microgravity. The site of MccB17 accumulation was found to be different, depending on whether the organism was grown in shaking flasks or in rotating bioreactors designed to establish a simulated microgravity environment. In flasks, the accumulation was cellular, but in the reactors, virtually all the microcin was found in the medium. The change from a cellular site to an extracellular one was apparently not a function of gravity, since extracellular production occurred in these bioreactors, irrespective of whether they were operated in the simulated microgravity or normal gravity mode. More probably, excretion is due to the much lower degree of shear stress in the bioreactors. Addition of even a single glass bead to the 50-ml medium volume in the bioreactor created enough shear to change the site of MccB17 accumulation from the medium to the cells.
Document ID
20040172876
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Fang, A.
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge 02139, United States)
Pierson, D. L.
Koenig, D. W.
Mishra, S. K.
Demain, A. L.
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1997
Publication Information
Publication: Applied and environmental microbiology
Volume: 63
Issue: 10
ISSN: 0099-2240
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
NASA Center JSC
NASA Discipline Environmental Health

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