In this study, we investigated the influence of initial internal nutrient concentrations at the time of elicitation on the ability of Eschscholzia californica (EC) cells to produce alkaloids. Three EC cell suspensions cultivated in culture media differing in their PO4(3-) and NO3- contents were sampled daily for 12 days and analyzed for extracellular and intracellular nutrient concentrations. The ability of the cells to produce alkaloids was tested along the three cell suspension cultures. Sampled cells were then further cultured for 7 days in a production medium containing the elicitor and an extraction resin. The alkaloid production of the cells was measured 7 days post-elicitation. In the low-N medium, starch, glucose, and phosphate contents in the biomass was increased by 470, 1624 and 70%, respectively, 10 days after inoculation compared to the control culture in standard B5 medium. Cell concentration was significantly reduced from 10.3 to 8.6 millions cell/mL on this low-N medium compared to the control, nevertheless alkaloid production was multiplied by 39 at day 10 when cells were elicited. Cells grown on the low-N or low-P media accumulated 83% and 188% more carbon, respectively, than control cells at the end of the culture. This intracellular C was mainly stored in the form of starch in low-P medium and both in the form of starch and glucose in the low-N medium. The ability of EC cells to produce alkaloids upon elicitation was shown to be strongly dependent on the initial intracellular C and P content at the time of elicitation. This suggests that reproducibility and productivity during EC cell culture could be enhanced by manipulating the intracellular C and P content at the time of elicitation.
A very simple off-line respirometer was developed to measure oxygen consumption rates of low respiring and shear-sensitive cell suspensions. The respirometer is composed of a 10 mL glass syringe in which the plunger was substituted with a polarographic dissolved oxygen probe. Mechanical agitation is provided by means of a magnetic stirring bar inside the measuring chamber and a stir plate placed below the respirometer. Abiotic oxygen fluxes occurring in the measurement chamber such as oxygen diffusion and probe oxygen consumption were investigated. The apparent oxygen uptake rate was then corrected for abiotic oxygen fluxes, leading to accurate measurements of respiration rates ranging from 0.5 to 25.0 mM x h(-1). Additionally, the effect of the stirring bar shape and of the test length on the integrity of plant (Eschschzoltzia californica) and animal (NS0) cells was evaluated. Animal cells showed a higher resistance to mechanical stirring inside the respirometer compared to plant cells (0% of broken cells and 78.1% respectively for a polygonal stirring bar and a 15 min test). For plant cells, cell damage inside the measurement chamber was reduced by optimizing the stirring bar shape and reducing the test length to 5 min or less. This very simple design was shown to provide reliable and low-cost quantification of the oxygen uptake rate of plant and animal cells and can be use even for more demanding measurements such as oxygen affinity studies.
Microscopic counting of plant cells is a very tedious and time-consuming process and is therefore seldom used to evaluate plant cell number on a routine basis. This study describes a fast and simple method to evaluate cell concentration in a plant cell suspension using a fluorescence microplate reader. Eschscholtzia californica cells were fixed in a mix of methanol and acetic acid (3:1) and stained with a fluorescent DNA binding dye (Hoechst 33258). Readings were done in a fluorescence microplate reader at 360/465 nm. Specific binding of the dye to double-stranded DNA was significantly favored over unspecific binding when 1.0 M Tris buffer at pH 7.5 containing 1.0 M NaCl and 75 microg ml(-1) of Hoechst 33258 was used. Fluorescence readings must be done between 4 min and 12 min following the addition of the staining solution to the sample. The microplate counting method provides a convenient, rapid and sensitive procedure for determining the cell concentration in plant cell suspensions. The assay has a linear detection range from 0.2 x 10(6) cells to 10.0 x 10(6) cells per milliliter (actual concentration in the tested cell suspension). The time needed to perform the microplate counting was 10% of that needed for the microscopic enumeration. However, this microplate counting method can only be used on genetically stable cell lines and on asynchronous cell suspensions.
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