Production of native flagellin from Salmonella Typhimurium in a bioreactor and purification by tangential ultrafiltration

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Abstract

Flagellin is the structural protein and most abundant component of bacterial flagella. The flagellum filament contains around 20,000-100,000 subunits of 50 kDa flagellin that can have diverse biotechnological applications such as vaccine adjuvant and cellular protector during chemo-and radiotherapy. The main aim of this work was to study a production process of purified native FliC flagellin of Salmonella Typhimurium. The culture conditions in shakers were established with medium devoid of animal-derived components. In bioreactors, culture conditions were established in order to obtain flagellin from the culture supernatant by tangential ultrafiltration (TUF). The concentrated 750 kDa cut-off TUF fraction had a purification factor of 1.5 and a recovery yield of 52.2% for flagellin. The volumetric production of flagellin using the described procedure achieved around 307 mg/L of culture, which represented a significant improvement over previously reported methods. These results permit the development of production and purification processes that can be easily scaled up. © 2011 The authors.

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Oliveira, B. H., Silva, M. R., Braga, C. J. M., Massis, L. M., Ferreira, L. C. S., Sbrogio-Almeida, M. E., & Takagi, M. (2011). Production of native flagellin from Salmonella Typhimurium in a bioreactor and purification by tangential ultrafiltration. Brazilian Journal of Chemical Engineering, 28(4), 575–584. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-66322011000400003

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