Thermodynamics Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Thermodynamics, including details on enthalpy, entropy, energy transitions. | ||||||||
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Thermodynamic boundary conditions suggest that a passive transport step suffices for citrate excretion in Aspergillus and Penicillium.Burgstaller W Institute of Microbiology, Technikerstrasse 25, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria. wolfgang.burgstaller@uibk.ac.at Excretion of organic acids, e.g. citrate, by anamorphic fungi is a frequent phenomenon in natural habitats and in laboratory cultures. In biotechnological processes for citrate production with Aspergillus niger extracellular citrate concentrations up to 1 mol l(-1) are achieved. Intracellular citrate concentrations are in the millimolar range. Therefore the question arises whether citrate excretion depends on active transport. In this article thermodynamic calculations are presented for citrate excretion by A. niger at an extracellular pH of 3 and by Penicillium simplicissimum at an extracellular pH of 7. From the results of these calculations it is concluded that in both cases a passive transport step suffices for citrate excretion. Published 3 March 2006 in Microbiology, 152: 887-93.
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