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. 1987 Aug;53(8):1876–1879. doi: 10.1128/aem.53.8.1876-1879.1987

High-Pressure Equipment for Growing Methanogenic Microorganisms on Gaseous Substrates at High Temperature

Günther Bernhardt 1, Rainer Jaenicke 1,*, Hans-Dietrich Lüdemann 1
PMCID: PMC204017  PMID: 16347413

Abstract

High-pressure, high-temperature investigations on thermophilic microorganisms that grow on hydrogen or other gaseous substrates require instrumentation which provides sufficient substrate for cell proliferation up to 2 × 108 to 3 × 108 cells per ml under isothermal and isobaric conditions. To minimize H2 leakage and to optimize reproducibility at high pressure and high temperature, 10-ml nickel tubes with a liquid/gas ratio of 1:2 were used in a set of autoclaves connected in series. By applying a hydraulic pump and a 2.5-kW heating device, fast changes in temperature (up to 400°C) and pressure (up to 400 MPa) can be accomplished within less than 10 min. To quantify bacterial growth, determinations of cell numbers per unit volume yielded optimum accuracy. Preliminary experiments with the thermophilic, methanogenic archaebacterium Methanococcus thermolithotrophicus showed that bacterial growth depends on both temperature and pressure. At the optimum temperature, increased hydrostatic pressure up to 50 MPa enhanced the growth yield; at a pressure of >75 MPa, cell lysis dominated. Changes in cell proliferation were accompanied by changes in morphology.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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