Phenylacetic acid stimulation of cellulose digestion by Ruminococcus albus 8.

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Abstract

The rate of cellulose digestion by Ruminococcus albus 8 grown on a defined medium could be increased by adding a minimum of 6.6% (vol/vol) rumen fluid. Strain 8 was grown on half this concentration, and the culture medium before and after growth was analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to determine which components of the rumen fluid were used. Phenylacetic acid was identified as the component needed to make the defined medium nutritionally equivalent to one supplemented with rumen fluid. [14C]phenylacetic acid fed to cultures of strain 8 was primarily incorporated into protein. Hydrolysis of protein samples and separation of the resulting amino acids showed that only phenylalanine was labeled. The results indicate that cellulose digestion by strain 8 was probably limited by phenylalanine biosynthesis in our previously reported medium. The data obtained on the utilization of other rumen fluid components, as well as on the production of metabolites, illustrate the potential usefulness of this method in formulating defined media to simulate those in nature.

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Stack, R. J., Hungate, R. E., & Opsahl, W. P. (1983). Phenylacetic acid stimulation of cellulose digestion by Ruminococcus albus 8. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 46(3), 539–544. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.46.3.539-544.1983

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