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Industrial Microbiology

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Title: Industrial Microbiology


1
Industrial Microbiology
  • Organisms Selection and Improvement

2
Recap on Thursdays lecture
  • Large and Small Scale Processes
  • Improving the Process- Titre, Yield and VP
  • Primary and Secondary Metabolites
  • The Necessity for Growth

3
Lecture 2
  • The Organism and Mutants

4
Outline
  • Properties of useful industrial microorganisms
  • Finding and selecting your microorganism
  • Improving the microorganisms properties
  • Conquering the cells control systems
  • Storing industrial micro-organisms the culture
    collection

5
Properties of a Useful Industrial Microorganism
  • It must Produce the product!
  • But yield and titre may need subsequent
    improvement. Get the product on the market first
    and then improve!
  • Grows fast and produces product in large scale
    culture.
  • Resulting requirements for growth factors etc.
    usually acceptable. Sometimes can only get
    biomass / product yield required in small scale
    due to aeration difficulties in larger fermenter.

6
Properties of a Useful Industrial Microorganism
  • Compatibility with substrates.
  • May require subsequent modification of medium or
    organism e.g. v. low iron levels are required for
    citric acid production by Aspergillus.
  • Ease of genetic manipulation.
  • Genome known.
  • Gene transfer systems available.
  • Genetically stable.
  • Safe.Bacillus anthricis?
  • Well known industrially.
  • Could take genes for product formation and insert
    them into an industrial workhorse
    (Saccharomyces, Bacillus etc.).

7
Also Worth Considering
  • Yeasts and fungi can withstand higher initial
    concentrations of carbon substrates especially
    sugars
  • Product tolerancewill acid build up kill the
    organism?
  • Product location is product excreted?
  • Excretion e.g. amylases
  • Can improve product tolerance(higher titres and
    yields).
  • Easier purification (especially proteins).
  • Essential for correct form of some recombinant
    products. i.e. folding of protein
  • Retention inside the cell e.g. B-glucosidase in
    yeast
  • Can assist product concentration.
  • Ease of microorganism/medium separation vis a vis
    viscosity or organism density (brewing)

8
Sources of Potential Industrial Microorganisms
  • Culture collections.
  • Public e.g. NCCLS
  • Private i.e. within industry
  • Existing processes often yield hyper-producing
    strains due to self mutationthese may appear
    different on plates.
  • The natural environment Biodiscovery.

9
Biodiscovery
  • To strike it rich try environments that
  • Have high biodiversity
  • Are extreme
  • Are unexplored
  • Encourage the dominance of suitable organisms

10
Biodiscovery DNA Route
  • Collect isolates or go the DNA route
  • Make total community DNA extracts can screen at
    this level or
  • Put fragments (random or selected) into a
    suitable host.
  • Screen these recombinant organisms.
  • Artificial chromosomes (BACs and YACs) can carry
    whole pathways.

11
Screening
  • Selecting the useful organisms/genes from a vast
    number of possibilities during process
    development or improvement
  • Can operate at the cell or gene (DNA) level
  • Make task easier by
  • Keeping initial assays simple or capable of high
    throughput
  • Eliminate the useless before working on the
    useful
  • Get rid of duplicates (especially when working
    with DNA)

12
Screening
More complex studies. Medium/process
optimisation, genetic stability etc.
Simple/High throughput assays
Decreasing No. of Isolates
13
High Throughput screening
  • Use of cell sorters, multiwell plates, DNA chips
    and robotics
  • System shown can handle 3,000-10,000 assays per
    day

www.degussa.com/en/innovations/
highlights_extremophile.html -
14
Strain Improvement
  • Essential when setting up a new process or
    maintaining the competitiveness of an existing
    one. Strive to improve growth or yield of the
    strains you use.
  • Note
  • Organisms, medium and process will be discussed
    separately during this course, but they must
    always be considered TOGETHER when developing or
    improving an industrial process.

15
Improvement in Antibiotic Titre
Titre
Year
16
Obtaining improved strains
  • Select from existing populations
  • Mutation using chemicals or radiation
  • Classical Genetics conjugation, Transposon,
    transduction, etc.
  • Genetic Engineering.strain construction, plasmid
    vectors, temperature sensitive promoters, gene
    shuffling using cassettes etc.

17
Conquering Cell Control Systems
  • Cells normally have control mechanisms which
    avoids unnecessary production of enzymes and
    metabolic intermediates.
  • We must manipulate or destroy these to ensure
    overproduction of the desired enzyme.

18
Induction
  • Enzyme is only produced in the presence of an
    inducer (usually the substrate).
  • Our strategy
  • Use constitutive mutants.
  • Supply an inducer in the medium (discussed later).

19
Constitutive Mutants
  • Produce an inducible enzyme in the absence of its
    inducer thus the enzyme is never switched off.
    Lactose induces the Lac operon producing B-Gal.
    Glucose switches off the operon. In a
    constitutive mutant glucose never switches off
    B-Gal production.

Lactose ---------------------------gt Glucose
Galactose ß-galactosidase
20
Enrich populations for constitutive mutants by
  • Chemostat cultures where the enzyme substrate is
    the limiting nutrient (e.g. lactose)

21
The Chemostat
22
Enrich populations for constitutive mutants by
  • Sequential batch cultures alternating use of the
    inducing substrate as a nutrient with use of an
    alternate nutrient.
  • Example sequential cultures of Escherichia coli
    alternating lactose and glucose will enrich for
    mutants constitutive for beta galactosidase.

23
Finding Constitutive Mutants
  • Select constitutive isolates by their ability to
    grow
  • When the sole carbon source (e.g. Lactose) is a
    substrate for the enzyme but does not induce it.
    Enzyme is switched on in presence of both Lactose
    and Glucose

24
Inhibition/Repression
  • Build up of enzyme product (or another
    intermediate or end product further down the
    metabolic pathway)
  • Switches off enzyme activity (inhibition).
  • Switches off enzyme production (repression).
  • Our strategy
  • Avoid build-up of inhibitor/repressor.
  • Find mutants lacking inhibition/repression
    control.

25
Avoiding Build-up of Inhibitors and Repressors
  • Modifying pathways to avoid inhibitor/repressor
    build-up.
  • Simple pathway example lysine production by
    Aerobacter aerogenes.
  • Branched pathway example lysine production by
    Corynebacteium glutamicum and effect of
    progressive and concretive inhibition

26
Simple Pathway The Lysine Pathway in Aerobacter
aerogenes
  • In normal cells, feedback control stops the build
    up of lysine by acting at an early stage in the
    pathway

27
Lysine Production using Aerobacter aerogenes
  • A dual fermentation is used
  • Cultures of two different strains (A B) are
    grown up separately and then added together in
    the presence of acetone which breaks down
    permeability barriers and allows the cell
    contents to mix.

28
Strain A
  • Cannot convert Meso DAP to l-lysine
  • Grow in medium with plenty of glycerol and
    limiting amounts of lysine
  • Large amounts of L,L and Meso DAP build up

29
Strain B
  • The normal wild type strain.
  • Growth does not produce build up of lysine or
    intermediates.
  • Cells contain all pathway enzymes including that
    missing in strain A.

30
What happens when the cultures are mixed
  • The mixture contains
  • Large amounts of L,L and Meso DAP (from strain
    A).
  • The enzymes necessary for their conversion to
    lysine (from strain B).
  • The resultant is the production of large
    quantities of lysine.

31
Feedback control in branched pathways
Progressive and Concerted Control
  • Product levels at the end of branches control the
    pathway at a point before branching occurs.

Control Point
32
Feedback control in branched pathways
  • Controls can be complex, but fall into two broad
    groups
  • Control is progressive build up of one end
    product causes partial switch off further
    switch off occurs if there is build up at the end
    of another branch and so on.
  • Control is concerted no switch off unless
    products at the end of several branches build up
    complete switch off then occurs.

33
The Lysine Pathway in Corynebacterium glutamicum
CONCERTED CONTROL
34
NOTE
  • No switch off occurs unless BOTH lysine and
    threonine build up

35
Lysine production using Corynebacterium glutamicum
  • Use a mutant that cannot convert aspartate
    semi-aldehyde to homoserine

36
Lysine production using Corynebacterium glutamicum
  • Medium must contain limited amount of homoserine
  • Threonine levels will remain low, so no control
    will be exercised when high levels of lysine
    build up

37
Finding Mutants which do not recognise Inhibitors
Repressors
  • Isolate mutants which have lost an enzyme and
    then screen these mutants for revertants e.g.
    Isolate a Lactose-negative E. coli and then look
    for mutants that can use lactose.
  • Select strains which can grow in the presence of
    a compound very similar to a product or
    intermediary (an analogue) which
  • Mimics its control properties
  • Is not metabolised
  • e.g. IPTG (isopropyl-B-D-thiogalactoside) turns
    on lactose operon but cannot be used as a
    substrate by B-galactosidase

38
Catabolite repression
  • When readily utilised carbon sources are
    available to organisms catabolite repression may
    occur
  • May override induction mechanisms
  • Whole pathways my be switched off

39
Catabolite Repression (Glucose Effect)
40
Avoiding Problems with Catabolite Repression
  • Use fed batch cultures (discussed later)
  • Use mutants which lack catabolite repression i.e.
    can grow in high levels of glucose and still
    express galactosidase

41
Your Strains
  • How to Maintain them so they do not mutate

42
The In House Culture Collection
  • Source material for R D.
  • Strain preservation during screening and
    optimisation.
  • Starter cultures for production.

43
The In House Culture Collection
  • Isolates must remain.
  • Uncontaminated.
  • True to their known characteristics, both
    qualitative and quantitative.
  • Starters must be provided in a suitable and
    active form.

44
The In House Culture Collection
  • To avoid changes due to mutation and selection
  • Avoid excessive growth and subcuture.
  • Store strains in an inactive state.
  • Keep adequate backup stocks.
  • Keep full records of characteristics and validate
    strains periodically.

45
Some storage methods.
  • Lyophilisation (freeze dried stocks)
  • Glycerol suspensions at 80oc to -196oc
  • Freeze onto cryobeads (The Protect system)
  • Agar slope cultures overlaid with mineral oil and
    stored at 20oc
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