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WHAT IT PRODUCES

  • the bacterium produces acetate, pyruvate, and lactate when grown on monosaccharides and soluble cellulosic carbon sources.

 

 

GROWTH & DEGRADATION MECHANISM

  • C. japonicus is able to utilize corn stover and switchgrass as sole sources of carbon and energy for growth. 
    • corn stover and switchgrass subjected to the AFEX process
    • When added to M9 minimal medium, the washed, autoclaved, AFEX-treated corn stover (or AFEX-treated switchgrass) failed to support the growth of E. coli but allowed the growth of C. japonicus (Fig. 2 A). Growth of C. japonicus in the presence of AFEX-treated corn stover was associated with release of glucose and xylose monosaccharides (Gardner and Keating, unpublished), suggesting that cellulose and hemicellulose were used as carbon sources.
  • efficient cellulase secretion and growth on biomass are prevented by disruption of the type II secretion system

FIG. 2.

GENETIC MANIPULATION

  • C. japonicus can be metabolically engineered using broad-host-range plasmids.
  • We developed tools for directed gene disruptions in C. japonicus and used this system to construct a mutant in the gspD gene, which is predicted to encode a component of the type II secretion system. The gspD::pJGG1 mutant displayed a greater-than-2-fold decrease in endoglucanase secretion compared to wild- type C. japonicus. In addition, the mutant strain showed a pronounced growth defect in medium with biomass as a carbon source, yielding 100-fold fewer viable cells than the wild type. 

HOW TO MEASURE

  •  Use kits to measure organic acid concentrations

SOURCES

http://aem.asm.org/content/76/15/5079.full

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