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Influence of some microbiogenic elements on carotenogenic yeasts
Pulkrábek, Josef ; Holub, Jiří (referee) ; Obračaj, Jan (advisor)
Carotenogenic yeasts of the genus Rhodotorula are well known for their production of a variety of economically valuable and otherwise difficult to produce compounds such as fatty acids, carotenoids, ergosterol, and ubiquinone. This study investigates the effect of the addition of select microbiogenic elements (Fe, Se, I) and their combinations into mineral cultivation media on the production of the mentioned valuable metabolic products and the rate of element sorption into the biomass of the strains of Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, Rhodotorula kratochvilovae, and Rhodotorula toruloides. Additionally, the sorption of zinc oxide, ferrous fumarate, and selenomethionine into previously cultivated biomass was measured with sorption times of 2 and 24 hours. Fatty acid content was determined using GC-FID, while carotenoids, ergosterol, and ubiquinone were analyzed using HPLC-DAD, with element content being quantified using ICP-OES and IC. With a few exceptions, the production of metabolic products was decreased with the addition of elements into the media and inversely correlated with their concentration. Higher concentrations generally showed greater absolute amounts of sorbed elements but lower relative amounts, which, combined with reduced production of metabolic products shows that the media are not ideal for the cultivation of the given species. The elemental contents were such that biomass supplemented with individually sorbed elements would vaguely align with ESFA dietary reference values, but cultivation in media with a mixture of added elements could result in the biomass containing either insufficient iron or excessively high levels of selenium. Sorption levels were relatively low (5 to 22 % for iron and 0.5 to 2.5 % for selenium). Indicating that cultivation in media with lower concentrations of elemental additives is a promising area for future research.

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