Search results for "MESH : Culture Media"
showing 6 items of 6 documents
Cloning and expression of genes involved in conidiation and surface properties of Penicillium camemberti grown in liquid and solid cultures.
2008
International audience; Based on bioinformatic data on model fungi, the rodA and wetA genes encoding, respectively, a RodA hydrophobin protein and the WetA protein involved in conidiation mechanisms, were PCR-cloned and characterized for the first time in Penicillium camemberti. These results, completed by a sequence of the brlA gene (available in GenBank), which encodes a major transcriptional regulator also involved in the conidiation mechanism, were used to compare, by qRT-PCR, the expression of the three genes in liquid and solid cultures in a synthetic medium. While expression of the brlA and wetA genes increased dramatically in both culture conditions after 4 days of growth, expressio…
Screening of lactic acid bacteria for reducing power using a tetrazolium salt reduction method on milk agar.
2013
WOS:000315703100020 ; www.elsevier.com/locate/jbiosc; International audience; Reducing activity is a physiological property of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) of technological importance. We developed a solid medium with tetrazolium dyes enabling weakly and strongly reducing LAB to be discriminated. It was used to quantify populations in a mixed culture (spreading method) and screen strains (spot method).
Medium-size droplets of methyl ricinoleate are reduced by cell-surface activity in the gamma-decalactone production by Yarrowia lipolytica.
2000
International audience; Size of methyl ricinoleate droplets during biotransformation into gamma-decalactone by Yarrowia lipolytica was measured in both homogenized and non-homogenized media. In non-homogenized but shaken medium, droplets had an average volume surface diameter d32 of 2.5 microm whereas it was 0.7 microm in homogenized and shaken medium. But as soon as yeast cells were inoculated, both diameters became similar at about 0.7 microm and did not vary significantly until the end of the culture. The growth of Y. lipolytica in both media was very similar except for the lag phase which was lowered in homogenized medium conditions.
Listeria monocytogenes EGD-e biofilms: no mushrooms but a network of knitted chains.
2008
ABSTRACT Listeria monocytogenes is a food pathogen that can attach on most of the surfaces encountered in the food industry. Biofilms are three-dimensional microbial structures that facilitate the persistence of pathogens on surfaces, their resistance toward antimicrobials, and the final contamination of processed goods. So far, little is known about the structural dynamics of L. monocytogenes biofilm formation and its regulation. The aims of this study were, by combining genetics and time-lapse laser-scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM), (i) to characterize the structural dynamics of L. monocytogenes EGD-e sessile growth in two nutritional environments (with or without a nutrient flow), and…
Combined action of redox potential and pH on heat resistance and growth recovery of sublethally heat-damaged Escherichia coli
2000
International audience; The combined effect of redox potential (RP) (from -200 to 500 mV) and pH (from 5.0 to 7.0) on the heat resistance and growth recovery after heat treatment of Escherichia coli was tested. The effect of RP on heat resistance was very different depending on the pH. At pH 6.0, there was no significant difference, whereas at pH 5.0 and 7.0 maximum resistance was found in oxidizing conditions while it fell in reducing ones. In sub-lethally heat-damaged cells, low reducing and acid conditions allowed growth ability to be rapidly regained, but a decrease in the redox potential and pH brought about a longer lag phase and a slower exponential growth rate, and even led to growt…
Effects of oxidoreduction potential combined with acetic acid, NaCl and temperature on the growth, acidification, and membrane properties of Lactobac…
2002
International audience; The effects of oxidoreduction potential (Eh) combined with acetic acid, NaCl and temperature on the growth, acidification, and membrane properties of Lactobacillus plantarum were studied. The culture medium was set at pH 5, and two different Eh values were adjusted using nitrogen (Eh = +350 mV) or hydrogen (Eh = -300 mV) gas. In reducing condition, the growth was slowed and the acidification delayed at 37 degrees C, but not at 10 degrees C. A synergistic inhibitory effect of reducing Eh, acetic acid and NaCl was observed, mainly for delaying the lag phase before acidification. These results may be explained by changes in ATPase activity, membrane fluidity and surface…