Affiliation:
1. Division of Biological Sciences, National Research Council of Canada. Ottawa, Canada K1A 0R6
Abstract
In coculture,
Bacteroides cellulosolvens
and
Clostridium saccharolyticum
fermented 33% more cellulose than did
B. cellulosolvens
alone. Also, cellulose digestion continued at a maximum rate 48 h longer in coculture.
B. cellulosolvens
hydrolyzes cellulose and supplies
C. saccharolyticum
with sugars and a growth factor replaceable by yeast extract. Alone,
B. cellulosolvens
exhibited an early cessation of growth which was not due to nutrient depletion, low pH, or toxic accumulation of acetic acid, ethanol, lactic acid, H
2
, CO
2
, cellobiose, glucose, or xylose. However, a 1-h incubation of
B. cellulosolvens
spent-culture medium with
C. saacharolyticum
cells starved for growth factor allowed a resumption of
B. cellulosolvens
growth. The symbiotic relationship of this naturally occurring coculture is one of mutualism, in which the cellulolytic microbe supplies the saccharolytic microbe with nutrients, and in turn the saccharolytic microbe removes a secondary metabolite toxic to the primary microbe.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
39 articles.
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