Development of a process for the production of the anticancer lead compound pleurotin by fermentation of Hohenbuehelia atrocaerulea

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Abstract

Pleurotin is a naphthoquinone antibiotic originally isolated from Pleurotus griseus. Two pleurotin producing strains of Hohenbuehelia atrocaerulea have been identified, which, on solid substrate fermentation for 2 months yield 1-2 mg/l of the antibiotic. Described here is the lengthy developmental process which resulted in a production protocol being developed which reliably yields pleurotin from liquid fermentation at > 300 mg/l. Critical to obtaining this increase in titer was inclusion in the media of an aqueous extract of alder wood. © Society for Industrial Microbiology 2006.

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Shipley, S. M., Barr, A. L., Graf, S. J., Collins, R. P., McCloud, T. G., & Newman, D. J. (2006). Development of a process for the production of the anticancer lead compound pleurotin by fermentation of Hohenbuehelia atrocaerulea. Journal of Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology, 33(6), 463–468. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10295-006-0089-0

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