Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.43, No.1, 83-88, 1995
High-Yield Production of Diphtheria-Toxin Mutants by High-Density Culture of C7(Beta)(Tox+) Strains Grown in a Non-Deferrated Medium
A high-density growth approach was utilized to produce mutated diphtheria toxin from two strains of Corynebacterium diphtheria : C7 (beta)((tox-201, tox-9)) and C7 (beta)((tox-107)). The cross-reacting mutants (CRM) of the diphtheria toxin are CRM9 and CRM107; both of them carry the mutation in their binding site and, as a result, have 1/300 of the systemic toxicity of the wild-type diptheria toxin. Since iron inhibits diphtheria toxin production, the traditional approach has been to grow the bacteria in a very low iron concentration. The procedure described here involved the use of a modified, non-deferrated, growth medium that provided fast and high-density growth of the bacteria, and which, when associated with simultaneous depletion of glucose and iron, enhanced the toxin production. Oxygen-enriched air was supplied to enable the bacteria to grow to a cell density giving an absorbance of 70 at 600 nm (15-20 g/l dry weight). The maximum toxin concentration in the culture supernatant was 150 mg/l. The CRM products, which remained stable following microfiltration and ultrafiltration, could be easily purified using a two-step chromatography procedure.