Development of butanol-tolerant bacillus subtilis strain GRSW2-B1 as a potential bioproduction host

40Citations
Citations of this article
65Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

As alternative microbial hosts for butanol production with organic-solvent tolerant trait are in high demands, a butanol-tolerant bacterium, Bacillus subtilis GRSW2-B1, was thus isolated. Its tolerance covered a range of organic solvents at high concentration (5%v/v), with remarkable tolerance in particular to butanol and alcohol groups. It was susceptible for butanol acclimatization, which resulted in significant tolerance improvement. It has versatility for application in a variety of fermentation process because it has superior tolerance when cells were exposed to butanol either as high-density, late-exponential grown cells (up to 5%v/v) or under growing conditions (up to 2.25%v/v). Genetic transformation procedure was optimized, yielding the highest efficiency at 5.17 × 103 colony forming unit (μg DNA)-1. Gene expression could be effectively driven by several promoters with different levels, where as the highest expression was observed with a xylose promoter. The constructed vector was stably maintained in the transformants, in the presence or absence of butanol stress. Adverse effect of efflux-mediated tetracycline resistance determinant (TetL) to bacterial organic-solvent tolerance property was unexpectedly observed and thus discussed. Overall results indicate that B. subtilis GRSW2-B1 has potential to be engineered and further established as a genetic host for bioproduction of butanol. © 2011 Kataoka et al; licensee Springer.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Kataoka, N., Tajima, T., Kato, J., Rachadech, W., & Vangnai, A. S. (2011). Development of butanol-tolerant bacillus subtilis strain GRSW2-B1 as a potential bioproduction host. AMB Express, 1(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1186/2191-0855-1-10

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free