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MSU MMG 301 - Biotechnology: Products derived from Microbes
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MMG 301 Lec. 27Biotechnology: Products derived from MicrobesQuestions for Today:1. What are some major microbial products and how are they made?2. What is biocatalysis?3. What is primary vs. secondary metabolism?4. What is a Fermentor, how is it used?5. How does one discover/produce new antibiotics?Overview of microbial products• Foods• Breads, cheeses, yogurt, mushrooms, wine, beer, soy sauce, sake, etc.• Commodities:• Food additives – amino acids, thickening agents, vitamins• Solvents – butanol, ethanol• Biofuels – ethanol, methane, hydrogen• Fine chemicals: • Pharmaceuticals – antibiotics, antifungals• Laboratory and diagnostic reagents –enzymes biochemicals, proteinsBread, beerFOODSFood additives:Amino acids – microbes produce the useful L-isomers (optically pure isomers)Problem: a microbe usually produces an amino acid for growth – so how do get the bug to make excess amino acids (e.g. 100 g Glu/L)?Strain optimization:•Regulatory mutants: select mutants that have lost normal feedback inhibition of biosynthetic pathway; example: lysine production byBrevibacterium flavum•Other beneficial mutations: altered cell membrane; example: Corynebacterium glutamicum for glutamate productionVitaminsVitamin B12Propionibacterium, PseudomonasRiboflavinOther food additivesCitric acid Aspergillus niger(Increase yield byFe deficient growth)Acetic acid AcetobacterMicrobial production of industrial enzymes A $1.5 billion industryOther commodity products: solvents, fuels, other chemicalsIncrease yields by strain selection, metabolic pathway engineering, and process improvement; enzymes may be added by incorporation of genes from other organisms (Lec. 28)xylose reductase from Pichia stipitisSaccharomyces cerevisiaexylitolbovine lactate dehydrogenaseSaccharomyces cerevisiaelactic acidSubmerged cultureAspergillusItaconic acidPyruvate decarboxylase, and alcohol dehydrogenase from ZymomonasE. coliethanolNew gene(s)OrganismProduct•Glucose isomerase – high fructose corn syrup•Saccharases – starch breakdown•Proteases – industrial detergents, food processing; subtlisin from Bacillus subtilis largest enzyme market•Cellulases – fuel production, “stonewashed” denim•Extremozymes – stable at extreme pH, temp, salt conditions (e.g., taq polymerase)•Amylase, pectinase, rennin, lipase, etc. (Table 30.4)•New enzymes by directed evolutionBiocatalysis, bioconversion, or biotransformation: microbial conversion of substrates to more useful compoundsUse whole microbial cells as live “bag of enzymes” to perform useful chemical conversionsPrimary and secondary metabolism Some definitions used in industry:fermentation – large-scale growth (usually in vats or tanks) of microorganisms (this differs from the term used to describe bioenergetics!)primary metabolites – substances produced during the primary growth phase of a culturesecondary metabolites – are produced near the end of the growth phase or in stationary phaseAlternatively, the cells or the purified enzyme can be “immobilized” (bound to a resin or encapsulated) for use in a “bioreactor”. Substrate flows through and is converted to product.Secondary metabolites are:-- Unpredictable -- formation is not consistent among all members of a species-- Non-essential for growth-- Highly dependent on growth conditions-- Often found in families of related chemical structures2 optionsFermentors and process control•Mixing, aeration, and O2monitoring (getting enough dissolved oxygen is a major problem)•Temperature control•Sterilization•Sampling and harvest ports•pH controlScale-up: from benchtop to commercial fermentorsFlask cultures: feasibility testing↓Laboratory fermentor: 1-10 Liter↓Pilot plant: ~300-3000 Liter; adjust conditions to be close to what will be encountered in commercial scale; cost not yet a major factor↓Commercial fermentor: up to 500,000 litersGrowth media used in industrial fermentationsHigh production of products will not be useful if they are too expensive to grow – need cheap ingredients for formulation of growth media for industrial-scale cultures.For example: 500,000 liters of growth medium used for laboratory-scale E. coli cultures would cost over $200,000!Solution – use agricultural and food-product by-products and other inexpensive nutrient sourcesCrude animal and plant productsVitamins Crude inorganic chemicals, fertilizer-grade phosphatesIron and trace elementsCorn-steep liquor, soybean meal, ammonium salts, stick liquor (slaughterhouse by-products)Nitrogen Molasses, whey, agricultural waste (e.g. corncobs)Carbon/energyRaw materialSourceOther types of mass culture methodsAir lift fermentors: air flow keeps culture mixedSolid state fermentation: growth without added water (e.g., silage)Fixed-bed reactor: microbes grow on porous solid surfaceFluidized-bed reactor: microbes grow on surface of inert particles suspended in flowing growth medium[The goal is to maximize product while minimizing the expense!]Antibiotics: an example of drug discovery to industrial productionTraditional screening test for antibiotic producers. (Recall that you already learned about zones of inhibition for pure antibiotics measured in a disc agar diffusion assay using a test organism)Usually a particular antibiotic producer does not make sufficient quantities for industrial production – the microbial strain must be optimized to obtain high-yielding variantsMicrobes producing antibiotics usually fall into 3 types: Spore-forming Gram-positive bacteria, Actinomycetes, FungiInitial microbial antibiotic producing strain↓Mutagenesis using chemicals, UV, or radiation along withgenetic manipulation (gene amplification, metabolic engineering)↓Screen for strains producing higher quantities under optimal conditions↓Repeat the cycle until strain has desired production↓Chemically modify the purified compound to produce a “semisynthetic” antibioticPenicillin fermentation using Penicilliumchrysogenum•Production increases as culture enters stationary phase•Extra feeding with carbon and nitrogen sources maintains production longer for greater yields•Precise feeding needed for maximal production1.5 g/liter-hour1.3 g/liter-hour1.2 g/liter hour0.018


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MSU MMG 301 - Biotechnology: Products derived from Microbes

Type: Miscellaneous
Pages: 14
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