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Journal ArticleDOI

Fermentation optimization for the production of lovastatin by Aspergillus terreus: use of response surface methodology

TLDR
A Box-Behnken experimental design was used to investigate the effects of five factors (oxygen content in the gas phase, concentrations of C, N and P, and fermentation time) on the concentrations of biomass and lovastatin produced in batch cultures of Aspergillus terreus as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
A Box-Behnken experimental design was used to investigate the effects of five factors—ie oxygen content in the gas phase; concentrations of C, N and P; and fermentation time—on the concentrations of biomass and lovastatin produced in batch cultures of Aspergillus terreus. The values of the various factors in the experiment ranged widely, as follows: 20-80% (v/v) oxygen in the aeration gas; 8-48 g dm −3 C-concentration; 0.2-0.6 g dm −3 N-concentration; 0.5-2.5 g dm −3 phosphate-concentration; and 7-11 days fermentation time. No previous work has used statistical analysis in documenting the interactions between oxygen supply and nutrient concentrations in lovastatin production. The Box-Behnken design identified the oxygen content in the gas phase as the principal factor influencing the production of lovastatin. Both a limitation and excess of oxygen reduced lovastatin titers. A medium containing 48 g dm −3 C supplied as lactose, 0.46 g dm −3 N supplied as soybean meal, and 0.79 g dm −3 phosphate supplied as KH2PO4, was shown to support high titers (∼230 mg dm −3 )o f lovastatin in a7 -day fermentation in oxygen-rich conditions (80% v/v oxygen in the aeration gas). Under these conditions, the culture medium had excess carbon but limiting amounts of nitrogen. The optimized fermentation conditions raised the lovastatin titer by four-fold compared with the worst-case scenario within the range of factors investigated.  2004 Society of Chemical Industry

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Lovastatin Production from Aspergillus Terreus ATCC 20542 Under Various Vegetable Oils Used as Sole and Supplementary Carbon Sources

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of vegetable oils used as sole and supplementary carbon sources on the production of lovastatin by Aspergillus terreus ATCC 20542 and their biomass in submerged fermentation has been examined.
Patent

Process for microbial production of a valuable compound

TL;DR: In this article, a process for the production of a valuable compound by cultivation of a microorganism comprising cultivating the microorganisms in a medium wherein all nutrients are provided in excess over the whole cultivation period and wherein a suitable amount of oxygen is fed to the culture to maintain the culture under conditions of oxygen limitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Production and scale-up of a monoclonal antibody against 17-hydroxyprogesterone

TL;DR: The hybridoma 192 was used to produce a monoclonal antibody (MAb) against 17‐hydroxyprogesterone (17‐OHP), for possible use in screening for congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH), and a change in the culture environment from the static conditions of a T‐flask to the stirred bioreactor culture did not affect the specificity of the MAb toward its antigen.

Statins: Biological activity and biotechnological production

TL;DR: Las estatinas de tipo I son metabolitos fungicos de gran interes no solo por su efecto hipocolesterolemiante sino por el numero de efectos pleiotropicos que presentan, lo que les confiere potencial impacto terapeutico en el tratamiento de varias enfermedades.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response surface methodology for lovastatin production by Aspergillus terreus GD13 strain.

TL;DR: A wild type Aspergillus terreus GD13 strain, chosen after extensive screening, was optimized for lovastatin production using statistical Box-Behnken design of experiments and highlighted the positive effect of soybean meal concentration and inoculum level for achieving maximal level of Lovastatin.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Some New Three Level Designs for the Study of Quantitative Variables

TL;DR: In this paper, a class of incomplete three level factorial designs useful for estimating the coefficients in a second degree graduating polynomial are described and the designs either meet, or approximately meet, the criterion of rotatability and for the most part can be orthogonally blocked.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competitive inhibition of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme a reductase by ML-236A and ML-236B fungal metabolites, having hypocholesterolemic activity

TL;DR: The experiments reported in this paper demonstrate that MG236A and ML-236B inhibit specifically 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl (HMG)CoA reductase (EC 1 .I .1.34), the rate-limiting enzyme in cholesterol synthetic pathway, without affecting the rest of the enzymes involved in this pathway, and that the inhibition is competitive with respect to the substrate HMG-CoA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Secondary metabolites of the fungus Monascus : A review

TL;DR: This review deals with polyketides produced by the filamentous fungusMonascus which include: 1) a group of yellow, orange and red pigments, 2) agroup of antihypercholesterolemic agents including mevinolin and related compounds and 3) the newly discovered metabolite ankalactone.
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