Lactococcus lactis was grown in a simple synthetic medium with glucose as substrate, enabling the precise quantification of each nutrient's contribution to growth. As expected, for the growth of lactic acid bacteria, the growth rate decreased progressively during the cultivation after a short period of exponential growth. End‐products of fermentation, predominantly lactate and in minor amounts formate, acetate and ethanol, accumulated within the medium. Growth of the bacterium in fresh media supplemented with these end‐products showed that the concentrations attained in the fermentor had no significant influence on the growth rate. As regards nutrients, vitamins and magnesium were never limiting during the culture. On the other hand, amino acid concentrations decreased, some of them being totally consumed and exhausted from the medium before growth ceased. However, growth in reconstituted media constructed with the amino acid concentrations remaining at different times of cultivation showed that amino acid depletion could not account for the observed growth decrease. Batch culture supernatant fluid was used as cultivation medium. Growth rates observed in supernatant cultures supplemented with various nutrients, compared to non‐supplemented supernatant, showed that no addition improved growth. Finally, it was concluded that in the experimental conditions used in this study, growth inhibition was predominantly due to phenomena other than lactate inhibition and nutritional limitations, and hence associated with unidentified compounds produced in the fermentation.
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