Abstract
Lipid accumulation and fatty acid composition in Candida 107 have been studied using a two-stage continuous culture system in which the first vessel was run under carbon-limited conditions and then the entire output was passed into a second vessel, where lipid accumulation was stimulated by adding only glucose. Maximum lipid accumulation (28% of yeast [dry weight]) occurred for a volume ratio of vessel 1 to vessel 2 of 3:5, with 30 g of glucose per liter being added to vessel 2 operated at 25°C with an aeration rate of between 0.1 and 1.0 volume of air/volume of medium per min. Although the maximum specific rate of lipid formation (0.05 g of lipid/g of yeast per h) was higher than in a nitrogen-limited, single-stage system, the efficiency of lipid formation was much less and never exceeded 14 g of lipid produced per 100 g of glucose consumed. The fatty acid composition was not significantly altered in either the two-stage or single-stage culture (nitrogen-limited) systems by changes in growth temperature (from 19 to 33°C) or aeration rates (0.05 to 1.0 volume of air/volume of medium per min); or, in the two-stage system, by changes in the residence time of the yeast in the second vessel (from 3.2 to 24.4 h), or, in the single-stage system, by changes in pH (from 3.5 to 7.5). Only when the concentration of glucose entering vessel 2 of the two-stage system was less than 30 g/liter did significant changes in the fatty acids occur. Thus, although a two-stage continuous culture system allows lipid accumulation to be separated from the growth phase, it offers no practical advantages over a single-stage system as a means of producing microbial oils and fats.