Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.65, No.5, 606-610, 2004
Growth and final product formation by Bifidobacterium infantis in aerated fermentations
Fermentation conditions were developed to allow Bifidobacterium infantis to grow in the presence of air. Batch fermentations in TPYG medium, starting from anoxic conditions followed by the application of low airflow rates [0.02-0.1 air volume, per liquid media volume, per minute (vvm)], were analyzed for growth, oxygen uptake, and product formation by the bacterium. Under all aerated fermentations, B. infantis showed high aerotolerance, with a maximum oxygen-specific consumption rate of 0.34 mmol oxygen per gram dry cell weight per hour in the presence of 0.06 vvm. Similar growth yields were obtained under oxic and anoxic conditions (0.11-0.13 and 0.11 g dry cell weight per mmol glucose, respectively). Oxygen also influenced metabolite formation since lactate production and its molar relation to acetate increased and formate decreased with aeration rate. Under anoxic conditions, a maximum concentration of 8.1 mM lactate and an acetate/lactate ratio of 3.5:1 were obtained, while under oxic conditions the lactate concentration increased more than two-fold and the acetate/lactate molar ratio decreased to 1.5:1. The possibility of balancing acetate/lactate molar ratios for organoleptic purposes as well as for obtaining good growth under microaerated conditions was demonstrated.