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Anaerobic fermentation, by yeasts

A great deal of attention has been directed to the anaerobic fermentation by yeasts, notably Saccharomyces cerevisiae in its various forms (top and bottom brewers and bakers yeast). This has been industrially important, and the subspherical cells, about 6-8 /n in diameter, are produced under standard conditions. They can be brought into suspension with little or no clumping. They are then suitable for tests of the permeation through the surface of the suspended cells. From the discussion on pages 9-13, it follows that permeation can be treated either as the diffusion into spheres, where there is no semipermeable plasma membrane, or as the unidimensional diffusion through a relatively thin, slightly permeable membrane, with substantial complete diffusion of permeant. Since there is every reason to assume the latter case, the former case is considered unimportant. [Pg.13]


See other pages where Anaerobic fermentation, by yeasts is mentioned: [Pg.447]    [Pg.113]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.32 , Pg.144 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.144 ]




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