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Growth medium

About: Growth medium is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1889 publications have been published within this topic receiving 59171 citations. The topic is also known as: culture medium & culture media.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that, at least on minimal medium plates, membrane damage contributes significantly towards cell killing, and the large variability often observed in near‐UV radiation survival data, is largely oxygen dependent.
Abstract: A DNA repair competent strain of Escherichia coli K-12 showed sensitivity to inorganic salts (at concentrations routinely used in minimal media) after irradiation with broad spectrum near–UV radiation, at fluences that caused little inactivation when plated on complex growth medium. This effect was not observed with cells that had been exposed to 254 nm radiation. This sensitivity to minimal medium was increased by increasing the salt concentration of the medium and by increasing the pH of the medium. This sensitivity was greatly increased by adding to the medium a low concentration of commercial glassware cleaning detergent that had no effect on unirradiated cells or far-UV irradiated cells. These findings may explain the large variability often observed in near-UV radiation survival data, and demonstrate that, at least on minimal medium plates, membrane damage contributes significantly towards cell killing. This phenomenon is largely oxygen dependent.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It appeared that yeast extract and other amino-acid supplements prevented an observed inhibition of the growth of the slow variants below pH 6·0, apparently by satisfying a nutritional deficiency caused by a drop in pH.
Abstract: Yeast extract was fractionated on Sephadex G-25 into 7 fractions. The fraction most stimulatory to the growth of Streptococcus lactis C10 contained over 70% of the amino N present in yeast extract and consisted of a wide variety of free amino acids and a small amount of peptide material. Examination of possible replacement factors for this fraction revealed that the amino -acid material present was largely responsible for the stimulation of Str. lactis C10. Purine and pyrimidine bases and inorganic constituents also contributed to the stimulation. In addition, yeast extract contained a component which decomposed H2O2, a metabolite which accumulates in the growth medium under aerobic conditions and inhibits growth. The nature of the stimulation was studied by isolating slow and fast acid-producing colonies of Str. lactis C10. It appeared that yeast extract and other amino-acid supplements prevented an observed inhibition of the growth of the slow variants below pH 6.0, apparently by satisfying a nutritional deficiency caused by a drop in pH.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A serum free medium was developed, that could be used for the large scale propagation of various cell lines in bioreactors, and cultivated at growth rates comparable to those observed using serum-supplemented media, with no reduction in the formation of products such as monoclonal antibodies or recombinant human interleukin-2.
Abstract: A serum free medium was developed, that could be used for the large scale propagation of various cell lines in bioreactors. The medium is based on a 1:1 mixture of Iscove's Modified Dulbecco's Medium and Ham's Medium F12, supplemented with transferrin, insulin and a BSA/oleic acid complex. Several myelomas, hybridomas derived from different myelomas and spleen cells, and other lymphoid and non-lymphoid cell lines were cultivated at growth rates comparable to those observed using serum-supplemented media. There was furthermore no reduction in the formation of products such as monoclonal antibodies or recombinant human interleukin-2.

94 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Examination of both supernatant culture medium and cell pellets after exponential- and stationary-phase growth of Streptococcus mutans strain FA-1 and StrePTococcus faecalis ATCC 9790 showed the presence of [-3H]glycerol-labeled material that possessed several of the properties of glycerol teichoic acid.
Abstract: Examination of both supernatant culture medium and cell pellets after exponential- and stationary-phase growth of Streptococcus mutans strain FA-1 and Streptococcus faecalis ATCC 9790 (S. faecium) showed the presence of [-3H]glycerol-labeled material that possessed several of the properties of glycerol teichoic acid. In the supernatant medium of S. mutans FA-1, an apparently large-molecular-size material, which eluted from agarose columns with the Kd value expected of a lipoteichoic acid, was observed. Large amounts of this material were present in supernatants during the stationary phase. In contrast, with S. faecalis only an apparently lower-molecular-weight form, with a Kd consistent with deacylated glycerol teichoic acid, was found in the growth medium. Both organisms had high-molecular-weight lipoteichoic acid in the cells along with the deacylated glycerol teichoic acid. The presence of relatively large amounts of glycerol teichoic acids in the medium was considered to be a result of excretion of these compounds rather than a result of cellular lysis.

94 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The adenylate-kinase reaction was found to be far from equilibrium in the glucose-grown cells and when glucose was still present in the growth medium, and ADP is suggested to be the inducer of formation of respiratory enzymes.
Abstract: 1. Methods for the quantitative extraction of adenosine phosphates and nicotinamide nucleotides from yeast cells are described. 2. The intracellular concentrations of adenosine phosphates and nicotinamide nucleotides were measured during the aerobic growth cycle of yeast on glucose and galactose. 3. When sugars were still present in the media the intracellular concentrations of NADH and AMP were in general higher in glucose- than in galactose-grown cells, whereas ADP concentration was always lower in glucose-grown cells. 4. The adenylate-kinase reaction was found to be far from equilibrium in the glucose-grown cells and when glucose was still present in the growth medium. 5. The significance of the changes in the intracellular concentrations of adenosine phosphates and nicotinamide nucleotides observed during growth on either sugar is discussed in relation to the metabolism and growth of the cells. 6. The differences observed in the concentrations of these cofactors in glucose- and galactose-grown cells are also discussed in relation to the type of metabolism of these cells. Control of glycolysis at the level of phosphofructokinase in galactose-grown cells and at the level of phosphoglycerate kinase in glucose-grown cells is suggested. 7. ADP is suggested to be the inducer of formation of respiratory enzymes.

92 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20226
202126
202032
201926
201829