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Scope of Biotechnology and Industrial Microbiology

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Title: Scope of Biotechnology and Industrial Microbiology


1
Scope of Biotechnology and Industrial
Microbiology
2
NATURE OF BIOTECHNOLOGY ANDINDUSTRIAL
MICROBIOLOGY
  • One of the broadest definition of Biotechnology
    is the one given at the United Nations Conference
    on Biological Diversity in 1992 as any
    technological application that uses biological
    systems, living organisms, or derivatives
    thereof, to make or modify products or processes
    for specific use.
  • Some of these include the use of microorganisms
    to make the antibiotic, penicillin or the dairy
    product, yoghurt the use of microorganisms to
    produce amino acids or enzymes are also examples
    of biotechnology.

3
  • Industrial microbiology may be defined as the
    study of the large-scale and profit-motivated
    production of microorganisms or their products
    for direct use, or as inputs in the manufacture
    of other goods.
  • Thus yeasts may be produced for direct
    consumption as food for humans or as animal feed,
    or for use in bread-making their product,
    ethanol, may also be consumed in the form of
    alcoholic beverages, or used in the manufacture
    of perfumes, pharmaceuticals, etc.
  • Industrial microbiology is clearly a branch of
    biotechnology and includes the traditional and
    nucleic acid aspects.

4
CHARACTERISTICS OF INDUSTRIAL MICROBIOLOGY
  • The discipline of microbiology is often divided
    into sub-disciplines such as medical
    microbiology, environmental microbiology, food
    microbiology and industrial microbiology.
  • The characteristics of industrial microbiology
    can be highlighted by comparing its features with
    those of another sub-division of microbiology,
    medical microbiology.

5
Industrial vs Medical Microbiology
  • They differ in at least three different ways
  • First is the immediate motivation
  • In industrial microbiology the immediate
    motivation is profit and the generation of
    wealth.
  • In medical microbiology, the immediate concern is
    to offer expert opinion to the doctor about, for
    example the spectrum of antibiotic susceptibility
    of the microorganisms isolated from a diseased
    condition so as to restore the patient back to
    good health.
  • The generation of wealth is of course at the back
    of the mind of the medical microbiologist.

6
  • The second difference is
  • That the microorganisms per se used in routine
    medical microbiology have little or no direct
    economic value, outside the contribution which
    they make to ensuring the return to good health
    of the patient who may then pay for the services.
  • In industrial microbiology the microorganisms
    involved or their products are very valuable.

7
  • The third difference is the scale at which the
    microorganisms are handled.
  • In industrial microbiology, the scale is large
    and the organisms may be cultivated in fermentors
    as large as 50,000 liters or larger.
  • In routine medical microbiology the scale at
    which the pathogen is handled is limited to a
    loopful or a few milliliters.

8
  • If a pathogen which normally would have no
    economic value were to be handled on the large
    scale used in industrial microbiology, it would
    most probably be to prepare a vaccine against the
    pathogen.
  • Under that condition, the pathogen would then
    acquire an economic value and a profit-making
    potential the operation would properly be termed
    industrial microbiology.

9
Multi-disciplinary or Team-work Nature
ofIndustrial Microbiology
  • The microbiologist in an industrial establishment
    does not function by himself.
  • In a modern industrial microbiology organization
    these others may include chemical or production
    engineers, biochemists, economists, lawyers,
    marketing experts, and other high-level
    functionaries.
  • They all cooperate to achieve the purpose of the
    firm, which is not philanthropy, (at least not
    immediately) but the generation of profit or
    wealth.

10
  • Despite the necessity for team work emphasized
    above, the microbiologist or biotechnologist has
    a central and key role in his organization.
  • Some of his functions include
  • a. the selection of the organism to be used in
    the processes
  • b. the choice of the medium of growth of the
    organism
  • c. the determination of the environmental
    conditions for the organisms optimum
    productivity i.e., pH, temperature, aeration, etc.

11
  • d. during the actual production the
    microbiologist or biotechnologist must monitor
    the process for the absence of contaminants, and
    participate in quality control to ensure
    uniformity of quality in the products
  • e. the proper custody of the organisms usually in
    a culture collection, so that their desirable
    properties are retained
  • f. the improvement of the performance of the
    microorganisms by genetic manipulation or by
    medium reconstitution.

12
Obsolescence in Industrial Microbiology
  • As profit is the motivating factor in the pursuit
    of industrial microbiology, less efficient
    methods are discarded as better ones are
    discovered.
  • Indeed a microbiological method may be discarded
    entirely in favor of a cheaper chemical method.
  • This was the case with ethanol for example which
    up till about 1930 was produced by fermentation.

13
  • When cheaper chemical methods using petroleum as
    the substrate became available in about 1930,
    fermentation ethanol was virtually abandoned.
  • From the mid-1970s the price of petroleum has
    climbed steeply.
  • It has once again become profitable to produce
    ethanol by fermentation.
  • Several countries notably Brazil, India and the
    United States have officially announced the
    production of ethanol by fermentation for
    blending into gasoline as gasohol

14
Free Communication of Procedures inIndustrial
Microbiology
  • Many procedures employed in industrial
    microbiology do not become public property for a
    long time because the companies which discover
    them either keep them secret, or else patent
    them.
  • The undisclosed methods are usually blandly
    described as know-how.
  • The reason for the secrecy is obvious and is
    designed to keep the owner of the secret one step
    ahead of his/her competitors.
  • For this reason, industrial microbiology
    textbooks often lag behind in describing methods
    employed in industry.

15
PATENTS AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS IN
INDUSTRIAL MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
  • All over the world, governments set up patent or
    intellectual property laws, which have two aims.
  • First, they are intended to induce an inventor to
    disclose something of his/her invention.
  • Second, patents ensure that an invention is not
    exploited without some reward to the inventor for
    his/her innovation anyone wishing to use a
    patented invention would have to pay the patentee
    for its use.

16
THE USE OF THE WORD FERMENTATION IN INDUSTRIAL
MICROBIOLOGY
  • The word fermentation comes from the Latin verb
    fevere, which means to boil.
  • It originated from the fact that early at the
    start of wine fermentation gas bubbles are
    released continuously to the surface giving the
    impression of boiling.
  • It has three different meanings which might be
    confusing.

17
  • The first meaning relates to microbial
    physiology.
  • In strict physiological terms, fermentation is
    defined in microbiology as the type of metabolism
    of a carbon source in which energy is generated
    by substrate level phosphorylation and in which
    organic molecules function as the final electron
    acceptor (or as acceptors of the reducing
    equivalents) generated during the break-down of
    carbon-containing compounds or catabolism.
  • As is well-known, when the final acceptor is an
    inorganic compound the process is called
    respiration.
  • Respiration is referred to as aerobic if the
    final acceptor is oxygen and anaerobic when it is
    some other inorganic compound outside oxygen e.g
    sulphate or nitrate.

18
  • The second usage of the word is in industrial
    microbiology, where the term fermentation is
    any process in which micro-organisms are grown on
    a large scale, even if the final electron
    acceptor is not an organic compound (i.e. even if
    the growth is carried out under aerobic
    conditions).
  • Thus, the production of penicillin, and the
    growth of yeast cells which are both highly
    aerobic, and the production of ethanol or
    alcoholic beverages which are fermentations in
    the physiological sense, are all referred to as
    fermentations.

19
  • The third usage concerns food.
  • A fermented food is one, the processing of which
    microorganisms play a major part.
  • Microorganisms determine the nature of the food
    through producing the flavor components as well
    deciding the general character of the food, but
    microorganisms form only a small portion of the
    finished product by weight.
  • Foods such as cheese, bread, and yoghurt are
    fermented foods.

20
ORGANIZATIONAL SET-UP IN AN INDUSTRIAL
MICROBIOLOGY ESTABLISHMENT
  • The organization of a fermentation industrial
    establishment will vary from one firm to another
    and will depend on what is being produced.
  • Nevertheless the diagram in Fig. 1.1 represents
    in general terms the set-up in a fermentation
    industry.

21
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