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. 1988 Oct;54(10):2411–2414. doi: 10.1128/aem.54.10.2411-2414.1988

Effect of Nitrogen on Polysaccharide Production in a Porphyridium sp

Shoshana (Malis) Arad 1,*, Orit (Dahan) Friedman 1, Avi Rotem 1
PMCID: PMC204273  PMID: 16347752

Abstract

Porphyridium cultures grown on either nitrate or ammonium as the nitrogen source showed similar patterns of growth and cell wall polysaccharide production. The effect of nitrogen on growth and cell wall polysaccharide production was studied by applying three regimens of supply: batch mode, in which nitrate was supplied at the beginning of the experiment and became depleted at day 6; continual mode, in which nitrate was added daily; and deficient mode, in which the cells were cultured in a nitrate-free medium. Growth was similar in the batch- and continual-mode cultures, whereas it was totally inhibited in the deficient-mode culture. Polysaccharide content (per volume) was highest in the batch-mode culture and lowest in the deficient-mode culture. However, polysaccharide production per cell was similar in the continual- and deficient-mode cultures, the highest value being found in the batch-mode culture. In addition to its effect on polysaccharide content, nitrogen affected the polysaccharide distribution between soluble and bound polysaccharides. In the deficientmode culture, most of the cell wall polysaccharide was dissolved in the medium.

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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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