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Fermentation Study Guide

Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Fermentation – a catabolic pathway where organic compounds act as both electron donors and acceptors; no external O₂ or inorganic acceptors. ATP yield – only 2–5 ATP per glucose (substrate‑level phosphorylation), versus 32 ATP in aerobic respiration. Glycolysis – universal first step: glucose → 2 pyruvate + 2 ATP + 2 NADH. Redox balance – NAD⁺ is regenerated when pyruvate is reduced to organic end‑products (lactate, ethanol, etc.). Fermentative electron sink – organic molecules (e.g., acetaldehyde) or H₂ (via ferredoxin + hydrogenase) accept electrons. Major end‑products – lactate, ethanol, acetate, CO₂, H₂, succinate, propionate, butyrate. Industrial modes – batch, fed‑batch, continuous (chemostat, turbidostat, plug‑flow). Circular economy – waste streams → bio‑fuels, bioplastics, nutrients; reduces fossil‑fuel dependence. 📌 Must Remember Overall ethanol equation: $C6H{12}O6 \rightarrow 2\,C2H5OH + 2\,CO2$. ATP per glucose: Fermentation = 2–5 ATP; Aerobic respiration ≈ 32 ATP. Key enzymes: Alcohol dehydrogenase (acetaldehyde → ethanol, NADH → NAD⁺); Hydrogenase (ferredoxin + H⁺ → H₂). Batch phases: Lag → Exponential → Stationary (secondary metabolites) → Death. Mixed‑acid profile: lactate, acetate, ethanol, CO₂, H₂ (simultaneous). Yield influencers: temperature, pH, sugar concentration, O₂ level. 🔄 Key Processes Glycolysis Glucose → 2 pyruvate + 2 ATP + 2 NADH. Regeneration of NAD⁺ Homolactic: Pyruvate + NADH → lactate + NAD⁺. Ethanol: Pyruvate → acetaldehyde + CO₂; acetaldehyde + NADH → ethanol + NAD⁺. Hydrogen: NADH → ferredoxin → hydrogenase → H₂ (oxidized ferredoxin). Batch Fermentation Cycle Lag: adaptation. Exponential: rapid growth, primary metabolites. Stationary: nutrient limitation, secondary metabolites (antibiotics, enzymes). Death: cell lysis. Fed‑Batch Control Feed substrate gradually → keep cells in exponential phase → higher product titer. Continuous (Chemostat) Constant inflow of substrate + outflow of culture → steady‑state growth rate = dilution rate. 🔍 Key Comparisons Fermentation vs. Anaerobic Respiration Electron acceptor: organic vs. inorganic (e.g., nitrate, sulfate). Homolactic vs. Mixed‑acid Products: lactate only vs. lactate + acetate + ethanol + CO₂ + H₂. Batch vs. Fed‑batch vs. Continuous Substrate addition: all at start vs. incremental vs. constant. Productivity: simple but low yield vs. higher yield vs. steady high productivity. Yeast (S. cerevisiae) vs. Zymomonas mobilis Pathway: eukaryotic ethanol fermentation vs. Entner‑Doudoroff + pyruvate decarboxylase. Tolerance: S. cerevisiae higher ethanol tolerance. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Fermentation is just anaerobic respiration.” Wrong: no inorganic terminal electron acceptor; electron flow ends on organic molecules. “All fermentations produce ethanol.” – Incorrect; many produce acids, gases, or mixed products. “More NADH always means more product.” – Oversimplified; redox balance must be maintained; excess NADH may stall glycolysis. “Continuous fermentation eliminates all contamination risk.” – Open‑feed systems can resist but not eliminate contamination; sterility still crucial. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Electron sink” metaphor: Think of fermentation as a “battery” where organic products are the charge‑acceptors that keep NAD⁺ cycling. “Factory line” model: Glycolysis = raw material input; each downstream pathway (lactate, ethanol, H₂) is a different assembly line branching off to keep the line moving. “Phase clock” – Visualize batch culture as a clock: each tick (lag → exp → stat → death) corresponds to a predictable metabolic shift. 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Proton‑based fermentations – rare cases where protons donate electrons and CO₂ accept them (still fit the broader definition). Mixed‑culture resilience – open fermentations can outcompete contaminants, but only when the target community dominates substrate utilization. High sugar concentration – can cause osmotic stress, leading to lower ethanol yield despite abundant substrate. 📍 When to Use Which Choose ethanol fermentation when the goal is fuel or beverage production and a high‑ethanol tolerant yeast (e.g., S. cerevisiae) is available. Select mixed‑acid fermentation for waste‑to‑value processes needing multiple gases (CO₂, H₂) and acids (acetate, succinate). Batch is ideal for small‑scale, product‑testing or when product inhibition is minimal. Fed‑batch best for high‑titer, toxic products (e.g., organic acids) – control substrate to avoid inhibition. Continuous suits large‑scale, steady‑state production of low‑toxicity products (e.g., ethanol) where downstream removal is continuous. 👀 Patterns to Recognize “2 pyruvate → 2 product” pattern: many fermentations split glucose into two molecules of a specific product (e.g., ethanol + CO₂, lactate). Acid‑gas combo – presence of acetate, CO₂, H₂ together often signals mixed‑acid fermentation. Shift to stationary phase → appearance of secondary metabolites (antibiotics, enzymes). Increasing H₂ evolution → active ferredoxin‑hydrogenase pathway, often in strict anaerobes. 🗂️ Exam Traps Distractor: “Fermentation produces 32 ATP per glucose.” – Confuses with aerobic respiration. Trap: “O₂ is the terminal electron acceptor in fermentation.” – Wrong; O₂ is absent. Near‑miss answer: Listing inorganic electron acceptors (e.g., nitrate) for fermentation – actually anaerobic respiration. Misleading option: “All bacteria can perform ethanol fermentation.” – Only specific yeasts/bacteria (e.g., S. cerevisiae, Z. mobilis) do so efficiently. Choice confusion: “Batch and fed‑batch are the same.” – Forget that fed‑batch adds substrate during the run to extend exponential phase. --- Use this guide to scan key ideas quickly, recall high‑yield facts, and dodge common pitfalls before the exam.
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