Abstract
Cell growth and production of recombinant proteins in stationary phase cultures of Escherichia coli recover concomitantly with spontaneous lysis of a fraction of the ageing cell population. Further exploration of this event has indicated that sonic cell disruption stimulates both cell growth and synthesis of plasmid-encoded recombinant proteins, even in exponentially growing cultures. These observations indicate an efficient cell utilisation of released intracellular material and also that this capability is not restricted to extreme nutrient-starving conditions. In addition, the efficient re-conversion of waste cell material can be viewed as a potential strategy for an extreme exploitation of carbon sources and cell metabolites in production processes of both recombinant and non-recombinant microbial products.
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Corchero, J. L., Cubarsí, R., Vila, P., Arís, A., & Villaverde, A. (2001). Cell lysis in Escherichia coli cultures stimulates growth and biosynthesis of recombinant proteins in surviving cells. Microbiological Research, 156(1), 13–18. https://doi.org/10.1078/0944-5013-00066
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