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Production of Citrate by Anaerobic Fungi in the Presence of Co-culture Methanogens as Revealed by 1H NMR Spectrometry
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  • Production of Citrate by Anaerobic Fungi in the Presence of Co-culture Methanogens as Revealed by 1H NMR Spectrometry
  • Production of Citrate by Anaerobic Fungi in the Presence of Co-culture Methanogens as Revealed by 1H NMR Spectrometry
저자명
Cheng. Yan Fen,Jin. Wei,Mao. Sheng Yong,Zhu. Wei-Yun
간행물명
Asian-Australasian journal of animal sciences
권/호정보
2013년|26권 10호|pp.1416-1423 (8 pages)
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아세아태평양축산학회
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정기간행물|ENG|
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이 논문은 한국과학기술정보연구원과 논문 연계를 통해 무료로 제공되는 원문입니다.
서지반출

기타언어초록

The metabolomic profile of the anaerobic fungus Piromyces sp. F1, isolated from the rumen of goats, and how this is affected by the presence of naturally associated methanogens, was analyzed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The major metabolites in the fungal monoculture were formate, lactate, ethanol, acetate, succinate, sugars/amino acids and ${alpha}$-ketoglutarate, whereas the co-cultures of anaerobic fungi and associated methanogens produced citrate. This is the first report of citrate as a major metabolite of anaerobic fungi. Univariate analysis showed that the mean values of formate, lactate, ethanol, citrate, succinate and acetate in co-cultures were significantly higher than those in the fungal monoculture, while the mean values of glucose and ${alpha}$-ketoglutarate were significantly reduced in co-cultures. Unsupervised principal components analysis revealed separation of metabolite profiles of the fungal mono-culture and co-cultures. In conclusion, the novel finding of citrate as one of the major metabolites of anaerobic fungi associated with methanogens may suggest a new yet to be identified pathway exists in co-culture. Anaerobic fungal metabolism was shifted by associated methanogens, indicating that anaerobic fungi are important providers of substrates for methanogens in the rumen and thus play a key role in ruminal methanogenesis.