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Microbial Biotechnology

Microbial Biotechnology. Microbial Biotechnology. Microorganisms O rganisms that are too small to be seen without a microscope Include: bacteria, fungi, protozoa, microalgae, and viruses

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Microbial Biotechnology

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  1. Microbial Biotechnology

  2. Microbial Biotechnology • Microorganisms • Organisms that are too small to be seen without a microscope • Include: bacteria, fungi, protozoa, microalgae, and viruses • Live in places such as: soil, water, food, and animal intestines, rocks, glaciers, hot springs, and deep-sea vents • Microbe Exploitation • Genetic Engineering (ex: insulin production) • Food & Agriculture (ex: fermentation processes) • Energy Sources (ex: biofuels) • Crime and Security (ex: copying DNA; bioterrorism) • Medicine (ex: vaccines; antibiotics)

  3. Genetic Engineering & Microbes – Producing Insulin

  4. Food & Agriculture Fermentation is Important in Our Lives: FOODS - spoil by microbial fermentations - made by microbial fermentations (wine, cheese, pickles, bread) MUSCLE cells use fermentation if O2 is depleted LOUIS PASTEUR - described the scientific basis for fermentation, wine-making, and the brewing of beer

  5. Cellular Respiration C6H12O6 + O2 H20 + CO2 + ATP

  6. Fermentation • Typically refers to the conversion of sugar to alcohol using yeast under anaerobic conditions • Chemically it means the conversion of carbohydrates into alcohol or acids Fermentation Tank

  7. Fermentation

  8. Fermentation The process that produces alcoholic beverages or acidic dairy products

  9. Alcohol Fermentation Primary Fermentation • Yeast - converts juice into wine by anaerobic fermentation • Reds wines are fermented with skins and stems (tannin) • Pressed after fermentation

  10. Alcohol Fermentation Secondary Fermentation • Used to make quality wines and when the grapes have a high MALIC ACID content. • Lactic Acid bacteria convert the MALIC ACID into the milder lactic acid form (gives texture and flavor)

  11. From Wine to Vinegar Ethanol + OXYGEN -> Acetic Acid Vinegar Bacteria - Acetobacter aceti

  12. Anaerobic Fermentation Saccharomyces (Yeast) bread Acetobacter vinegar Pediococcus sausage Lactobacillus yogurt Propionibacterium Swiss cheese Bacillus cheddar cheese Streptococcus cottage cheese Penicillium (Fungus) blue cheese Saccharomyces (Yeast) wine and beer Aspergillus (Fungus) rice wine • Propionibacter shermani • is one of the three types • of bacteria used to make • Swiss cheese • responsible for the holes • cheese mixture is warmed • bubbles of CO2 form • - bubbles form holes

  13. Other Products From Microorganisms: Primary Metabolites: Amino Acids, Vitamins, Ethanol, Lactic Acid Secondary Metabolites:Antibiotics, Food coloring, Toxins Enzymes: Chymosin= a key component of rennet Lipase = enhances flavor in cheese making Lactase = breaks down lactose to glucose and galactose; to produce lactose-free milk Protease = Detergent additive a-amylase = production of high fructose corn syrup Pectinase = degrades pectin into soluble components, reduces cloudiness of chilled wine and fruit juice

  14. Energy & Microbes Bioethanol Fermentation: • Plant starch, cellulose from agricultural waste, and general garbage are abundant and renewable sources of fermentable carbohydrates

  15. Energy & Microbes Anaerobic Fermentation: • Biogas technology as an environmental solution to pollution • Anaerobic methanogenicthermophilic degradation of different types of wastes (cow and poultry manure, cotton stalks, and the organic fraction of municipal solid wastes)

  16. Crime and Security & Microbes • Bacteria can be used as a weapon and as a tool to solve a crime • Thermus aquaticus can tolerate high temperatures • Source of the heat-resistant enzyme Taq DNA polymerase • Enzyme used in PCR

  17. Microbes and Medicine Microbes and Vaccines: • Attenuated (weakened form), killed, live, recombinant vector vaccines • Boost immune systems to fight against disease caused by viruses and (sometimes) bacteria

  18. Making Vaccines

  19. Microbes and Medicine Microbes & Antibiotics: • Bacteria and fungi are used to create antibiotics (Ex: tetracycline and penicillin) • The genetic structure and material are altered and turned into antibiotics, as well as, many other types of medication

  20. Making Antibiotics

  21. Bioremediation http://archive.org/details/gov.ntis.ava19791vnb1 Bioremediation: A Primer

  22. Algae Bioremediation for Waste Treatment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-5mEoHzSKc

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