Marsh P D, Hunter J R, Bowden G H, Hamilton I R, McKee A S, Hardie J M, Ellwood D C
J Gen Microbiol. 1983 Mar;129(3):755-70. doi: 10.1099/00221287-129-3-755.
A sample of human dental plaque was homogenized in transport fluid and inoculated simultaneously into a glucose-limited and a glucose-excess chemostat maintained at pH 7.0 and a dilution rate (D) of 0.05 h-1. In an attempt to ensure the establishment of slow-growing bacterial populations, two further inoculations of each chemostat with fresh samples of dental plaque took place before a steady-state was attained at this dilution rate. The dilution rate was increased step-wise to D = 0.6 h-1, and then returned directly to D = 0.05 h-1. Contrary to chemostat theory, microbial communities with a high species diversity were maintained under all of the experimental conditions employed, although not all of the bacterial populations present in the inocula established successfully in the chemostat. At each steady-state the bacteriological composition and biochemical properties (fermentation products, enzyme assays and acid production) of the communities of each chemostat was determined. Higher cell yields and a slightly more diverse community were obtained from the glucose-limited chemostat at all dilution rates. A complex mixture of end products of metabolism was obtained from the glucose-limited chemostat, suggesting amino acid catabolism, while lactate was the predominant acid of the glucose-excess culture. In washed-cell experiments, communities from the glucose-excess chemostat produced the lower terminal pH values following a pulse of glucose, with the lowest pH values occurring at the higher dilution rates. A film of micro-organisms, which accumulated around the neck of the chemostat, was sampled at the end of the experiment. The microbial composition of the films from each chemostat differed markedly, and both were different to the community of the bulk fluid of the respective chemostat. Spirochaetes and a population of yeasts were detected in the films from the glucose-limited and glucose-excess chemostats, respectively. No invertase or glucosyltransferase activity, and little glucoamylase-specific glycogen was detected in the communities from either chemostat, although significant endogenous activity, particularly at high dilution rates, was obtained with washed-cells from the glucose-excess chemostat. The results suggest that the chemostat could make a valuable contribution to the study of the ecology of dental plaque.
将一份人类牙菌斑样本在运输液中匀浆,并同时接种到两个恒化器中,一个是葡萄糖受限的,另一个是葡萄糖过量的,恒化器维持在pH 7.0,稀释率(D)为0.05 h⁻¹。为了确保建立生长缓慢的细菌群体,在达到该稀释率的稳态之前,每个恒化器又用新鲜牙菌斑样本进行了两次接种。稀释率逐步提高到D = 0.6 h⁻¹,然后直接回到D = 0.05 h⁻¹。与恒化器理论相反,在所采用的所有实验条件下,都维持了具有高物种多样性的微生物群落,尽管接种物中存在的并非所有细菌群体都能在恒化器中成功建立。在每个稳态下,测定每个恒化器中群落的细菌组成和生化特性(发酵产物、酶分析和酸产生)。在所有稀释率下,葡萄糖受限的恒化器获得了更高的细胞产量和稍微更具多样性 的群落。从葡萄糖受限的恒化器中获得了代谢终产物的复杂混合物,表明存在氨基酸分解代谢,而乳酸是葡萄糖过量培养物中的主要酸。在洗细胞实验中,来自葡萄糖过量恒化器的群落 在葡萄糖脉冲后产生较低的终末pH值,最低pH值出现在较高的稀释率下。在实验结束时,对在恒化器颈部周围积累的微生物膜进行了采样。来自每个恒化器的膜的微生物组成明显不同,并且两者都与各自恒化器的主体流体群落不同。在来自葡萄糖受限和葡萄糖过量恒化器的膜中分别检测到了螺旋体和酵母群体。在来自任一恒化器的群落中均未检测到转化酶或葡糖基转移酶活性,并且几乎未检测到葡糖淀粉酶特异性糖原,尽管用来自葡萄糖过量恒化器的洗细胞在高稀释率下获得了显著的内源活性。结果表明,恒化器可为牙菌斑生态学研究做出有价值的贡献。