
doi: 10.1271/bbb.100183
pmid: 20699583
Acetobacter pasteurianus strains IFO3283, SKU1108, and MSU10 were grown under acetic acid fermentation conditions, and their growth behavior was examined together with their capacity for acetic acid resistance and pellicle formation. In the fermentation process, the cells became aggregated and covered by amorphous materials in the late-log and stationary phases, but dispersed again in the second growth phase (due to overoxidation). The morphological change in the cells was accompanied by changes in sugar contents, which might be related to pellicle polysaccharide formation. To determine the relationship between pellicle formation and acetic acid resistance, a pellicle-forming R strain and a non-forming S strain were isolated, and their fermentation ability and acetic acid diffusion activity were compared. The results suggest that pellicle formation is directly related to acetic acid resistance ability, and thus is important to acetic acid fermentation in these A. pasteurianus strains.
Diffusion, Ethanol, Fermentation, Polysaccharides, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Temperature, Acetobacter, Acetic Acid
Diffusion, Ethanol, Fermentation, Polysaccharides, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Temperature, Acetobacter, Acetic Acid
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