Propionate as the preferred carbon source to produce 3-indoleacetic acid inB. subtilis: comparative flux analysis using five carbon sources
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3-Indoleacetic acid (IAA) is a phytohormone that promotes plant root growth, improving the use of nutrients and crop yield and it is been reported that bacteria of the genusBacillusare capable of producing this phytohormone under various growth conditions. Considering this metabolic capability, in this work,Bacillus subtiliswas cultivated in five different carbon sources: glucose, acetate, propionate, citrate and glycerol; andl-tryptophan (Trp) was used as an inducer for the IAA production. Based on the experimental results it was observed that the highest growth rate was achieved using glucose as a carbon source (μ= 0.12 h−1) and the lowest value was for citrate (μ= 0.08 h−1). On the other hand, the highest IAA production was obtained using propionateYp/s= 0.975 (gIAA gTrp−1) and the lowest was when glucose was the substrateYp/s= 0.803 (gIAA gTrp−1). In order to explore the metabolism and understand these differences, the experimental data was used to calculate the flux distribution using the genomic-scale metabolic model ofBacillus subtilis. Performing a comparative analysis it is observed that the fluxes towards precursors increase when propionate is the carbon source. © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021.
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acetic acid; carbon; citric acid; glucose; glycerol; phytohormone; propionic acid; tryptophan; carbon; indoleacetic acid; indoleacetic acid derivative; propionic acid derivative; Article; Bacillus subtilis; bacterial metabolism; bacterium culture; carbon source; growth rate; high performance liquid chromatography; nonhuman; quantitative analysis; sequence homology; Bacillus subtilis; Carbon; Indoleacetic Acids; Propionates
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