Agricultural Microbiology
Agricultural Microbiology
Agricultural Microbiology
AGRICULTURAL MICROBIOLOGY
2
Agricultural Microbiology
Course Outline:
3
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 01:
HISTORY OF MICROBIOLOGY: SPONTANEOUS GENERATION THEORY
Microbiology often has been defined as the study of organisms and agents too small to
be seen clearly by the unaided eyethat is, the study of microorganisms. Because
objects less than about one millimeter in diameter cannot be seen clearly and must be
examined with a microscope, microbiology is concerned primarily with organisms and
agents this small and smaller.
Microbial World
Microorganisms are everywhere. Almost every natural surface is colonized by microbes
(including our skin). Some microorganisms can live quite happily in boiling hot springs,
whereas others form complex microbial communities in frozen sea ice.
Most microorganisms are harmless to humans. You swallow millions of microbes every
day with no ill effects. In fact, we are dependent on microbes to help us digest our food
and to protect our bodies from pathogens. Microbes also keep the biosphere running by
carrying out essential functions such as decomposition of dead animals and plants.
Microbes are the dominant form of life on planet Earth. More than half the biomass on
Earth consists of microorganisms, whereas animals constitute only 15% of the mass of
living organisms on Earth.
This Microbiology course deals with
The microorganisms can be divided into two distinct groups based on the nucleu s
structure:
Prokaryotes The organism lacking true nucleus (membrane enclosed chromosome
and nucleolus) and other organelles like mitochondria, Golgi body, entoplasmic
reticulum etc. are referred as Prokaryotes. (Ex: Bacteria, archaea)
4
Agricultural Microbiology
Eukaryotes - The organism possessing membrane enclosed nucleus and other cell
organelles are referred as Eukaryotes (Ex : algae, fungi, protozoa)
The microorganisms were divided into 6 distinct groups based on the phylogenic,
morphological and physiological characters.
The major groups of microorganisms are
About 5000 years ago, Persia (Now Iran) region recorded the wine making.
The Romans had God for that was specific for microorganisms. The roman God of
mold and mildew was Robigus and Robigo which means crop rust. (Rust is one of
the plant disease caused by fungus). God Robigus was very much feared because of
crop lost.
About 2000 years ago, Romans proposed that diseases were caused by tiny animals.
But, fundamentalist religions had a strong hold over the progress.
The real microbiology history starts from 1600s, when people began to make crude
lenses and microscopes.
5
www.AgriMoon.Com
Discovery of Microbes
To see microbes, you need a microscope. The first microscope was invented by
Antony van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723), a Dutch businessman.
Leeuwenhoek took up lens grinding to make magnifiying glasses so he could
examine fine weave of fabrics. In testing his lenses, he discovered many small
creatures he called "animalcules" in samples such as pond water. His best lenses
could magnify 300-500X.
6
Agricultural Microbiology
Where did microbes come from? Many believed they arose from simple materials
by process of spontaneous generation. This notion had been posited by Aristotle
(382-322 B.C.) and other Greek philosophers to explain decay and appearance of
animals such as flies and frogs, and was widely held as common sense even in
1700's and 1800's.
Francisco Redi (1626-1697) demonstrated that flies did not arise spontaneously
from rotting meat by simple experiment. If jar of meat was covered by fine
muslin, maggots did not arise. However, the simpler life forms discovered by
Leeuwenhoek lacked visible complexity, and most people still believed these
could arise spontaneously.
7
www.AgriMoon.Com
8
Agricultural Microbiology
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) was passionate believer that life only originated from
previous life, developed several experiments that finally
deflated claims for spontaneous generation. Pasteur filtered air
through cotton to trap airborne materials, then dissolved the
cotton and examined the particulate matter under a microscope;
many bacteria and spores of other life forms such as molds were
present. Since most skeptics kept arguing that overheating killed
the life force present in air, Pasteur developed and ingenious
experiment using a swan neck flask that allowed fresh air to
remain in contact with boiled materials. The long passageway
prevented airborne microbes from reaching the nutrient liquid,
without impeding access to air. One of Pasteur's flasks is still sterile after 100+ years of
being exposed to the air (Pasteur Institute, Paris).
9
www.AgriMoon.Com
growth took place as long as the flasks remained sealed. He proposed that air carried
germs to the culture medium, but also commented that the external air might be
required for growth of animals already in the medium. The supporters of spontaneous
generation maintained that heating the air in sealed flasks destroyed its ability to
support life. Several investigators attempted to counter such arguments. Theodore
Schwann (18101882) allowed air to enter a flask containing a sterile nutrient solution
after the air had passed through a red-hot tube. The flask remained sterile.
Subsequently Georg Friedrich Schroder and Theodor von Dusch allowed air to enter a
flask of heat-sterilized medium after it had passed through sterile cotton wool. No
growth occurred in the medium even though the air had not been heated. Despite these
experiments the French naturalist Felix Pouchet claimed in 1859 to have carried out
experiments conclusively proving that microbial growth could occur without air
contamination.
This claim provoked Louis Pasteur (18221895) to settle the matter once and for all.
Pasteur first filtered air through cotton and found that objects resembling plant spore s
had been trapped. If a piece of the cotton was placed in sterile medium after air had
been filtered through it, microbial growth appeared. Next he placed nutrient solutions
in flasks, heated their necks in a flame, and drew them out into a variety of curves,
while keeping the ends of the necks open to the atmosphere .Pasteur then boiled the
solutions for a few minutes and allowed them to cool. No growth took place even
though the contents of the flasks were exposed to the air. Pasteur pointed out that no
growth occurred because dust and germs had been trapped on the walls of the curved
necks. If the necks were broken, growth commenced immediately. Pasteur had not only
resolved the controversy by 1861 but also had shown how to keep solutions sterile. The
English physicist John Tyndall (18201893) dealt a final blow to spontaneous generation
in 1877 by demonstrating that dust did indeed carry germs and that if dust was absent,
broth remained sterile even if directly exposed to air. During the course of his studies,
Tyndall provided evidence for the existence of exceptionally heat-resistant forms of
bacteria. Working independently, the German botanist Ferdinand Cohn (18281898)
discovered the existence of heat-resistant bacterial endospores
10
Agricultural Microbiology
Proved that dust carries the germs and if no dust in the air, the sterile broth
remained free of microbial growth for indefinite period.
11
www.AgriMoon.Com
12
Agricultural Microbiology
****** ******
13
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 02:
GERM THEORY OF DISEASE
Introduction
Bacteria are mostly unicellular organisms that lack chlorophyll and are among the
smallest living things on earthonly viruses are smaller. Multiplying rapidly under
favorable conditions, bacteria can aggregate into colonies of millions or even billions of
organisms within a space as small as a drop of water. The Dutch merchant and amateur
scientist Anton van Leeuwenhoek was the first to observe bacteria and
other microorganisms. Using single-lens microscopes of his own design, he described
bacteria and other microorganisms (calling them "animacules") in a series of letters to
the Royal Society of London between 1674 and 1723.
Bacteria are classified as prokaryotes. Broadly, this taxonomic ranking reflects the fact
that the genetic material of bacteria is contained in a single, circular chain of
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) that is not enclosed within a nuclear membrane. The
word prokaryote is derived from Greek meaning "prenucleus." Moreover, the DNA of
prokaryotes is not associated with the special chromosome proteins called histones,
which are found in higher organisms. In addition, prokaryotic cells lack other
membrane-bounded organelles, such as mitochondria. Prokaryotes belong to the
kingdom Monera. Some scientists have proposed splitting this designation into the
kingdoms Eubacteria and Archaebacteria. Eubacteria, or true bacteria, consist of more
common species, while Archaebacteria (with the prefix archaemeaning ancient)
represent strange bacteria that inhabit very hostile environments. Scientists believe
these bacteria are most closely related to the bacteria which lived when the earth was
very young. Examples of archae bacteria are those bacteria which currently live in
extremely salty environments or extremely hot environments, like geothermal vents of
the ocean floor.
Microbes are organisms that we need a microscope to see. The lower limit of our eye's
resolution is about 0.1 to 0.2 mm or 100 - 200 um. Most microbes range in size from
about 0.2 um to the 200 um upper limits, although some fruiting bodies of fungi can
become much larger. Microbes include the bacteria, algae, fungi, and protozoa. In this
lecture we will discuss mostly the bacteria and the fungi.
Bacteria are found everywhere in water, soil, and even air. These small prokaryotic
cells, typically from 0.2 to 1 um in length, are capable of living in boiling water, frozen
ground, acid volcanoes, and at the bottom of the ocean. They can reproduce by
14
Agricultural Microbiology
Robert Koch was particularly concerned with this problem and, at first, he cultured
bacteria on solid fruits and vegetables such as slices of boiled potato but many bacteria
did not grow on such substrates. Then he perceived that it would be far better if a well-
tried liquid medium could be solidified with some clear substance. Koch (1881) tried
gelatin as a solidifying agent and succeeded in developing solid culture media, but
gelatin, the first solidifying agent used, had serious disadvantage of becoming liquid
above 28-30C which is below the optimum temperature for the growth of human
disease producing bacteria.
KOCHS POSTULATES:
1. The microorganism must be present in every case of the disease but absent from
healthy organisms.
2. The suspected microorganism must be isolated and grown in a pure culture.
3. The same disease must result when the isolated microorganism is inoculated into a
15
www.AgriMoon.Com
healthy host.
4. The same microorganism must be isolated again from the diseased host.
Robert Koch (1843-1910) was the first to rigorously demonstrate that a specific
disease was caused by a specific microorganism.
Koch worked on anthrax, a disease mainly of animals. Koch noticed that cattle
that died of anthrax all seemed to have a certain rod-shaped bacterium in blood,
not found in healthy animals. Koch was able to isolate the bacterium in pure
culture, put it back into healthy cows, and reproduce the disease.
Koch's Postulates: a logical way to identify the microbe causing a disease
****** ******
16
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 03:
PROTECTION AGAINST INFECTIONS
Control of growth as used here means to prevent the growth of microorganisms. This
control is affected in two basic ways: (1) by killing microorganisms or (2) by inhibiting
the growth of microorganisms. Control of growth usually involves the use of physical
or chemical agents which either kill or prevent the growth of microorganisms. Agents
which kill cells are called cidal agents; agents which inhibit the growth of cells (without
killing them) are referred to as static agents. Thus the term bactericidal refers to killing
bacteria and bacteriostatic refers to inhibiting the growth of bacterial cells.
Methods
There are various sterilization techniques available. However, several factorsinfluence
the effectiveness of sterilization process like, the concentration of antimicrobial agents,
time and temperature of exposure, size of population, type of contaminating microbes
etc.
Sterilization is brought about by a combination of physical and chemical agents that
adversely affect the microorganisms either by causing damage to the cell wall or cell
membrane or by inactivating the enzymes or by interfering with the synthesis of
nucleic acids and protein.
17
www.AgriMoon.Com
I. PHYSICAL AGENTS
There are different types of physical agents.
(i) Heat: The heat employed for removal of micro-organisms varied with the nature of
object and also depend on the purpose. Based on these different processes are
employed.
Advantages
Steam can penetrate through materials and sterilization is achieved by the coagulation
or denaturation of proteins and other cell constituents. Liquid media, solid media,
laboratory equipments (cloth, glasswares, etc.,) can be sterilized. The temperature and
pressure is high enough to kill spores, vegetative cells and viruses.
Disadvantages
Temperature sensitive media, animal tissue culture media, antibiotics, amino acids,
cannot be sterilized. Sometimes water may get inside incase of improper packing.
18
Agricultural Microbiology
Advantages
Dry heat does not corrode glassware and metal instruments as moist heat does. All
glasswares can be sterilized.
Disadvantages
The sterilization process is slow. It is not suitable for heat sensitive materials like many
plastic and rubber items.
(c) Boiling at 100C for 30 minutes. Kills everything except some endospores (Actually,
for the purposes of purifying drinking water 100o for five minutes is probably
adequate though there have been some reports that Giardia cysts can survive this
process). To kill endospores, and therefore sterilize the solution, very long or
intermittent boiling is required.
batch method (Low temperature holding): 62.8oC for 30 minutes flash method (High
temperature short time): 71.7oC for 15 seconds
(f) Incineration burns organisms and physically destroys them. Incineration is the
complete burning of the material in to ashes. Used for needles, inoculating wires,
glassware, etc. and objects not destroyed in the incineration process. This is the
direct and ultimate method of destroying cells. It is achieved by keeping the materials
directly in contact with the flame of Bunsen burner as a result all the microorganisms in
the surface are destroyed completely. Inoculating loops, needles and spreading rods are
sterilized by this method.
19
www.AgriMoon.Com
(ii) Radiation
Energy transmitted through space in a variety of forms is generally called radiation. It is
also known as "cold sterilization" as only little heat is produced during the process. The
most significant of this is electromagnetic radiation. The energy content and
radiation wavelength are inversely proportional to each other. Radiation may be
ionizing or non-ionizing.
20
Agricultural Microbiology
Ionizing radiation
High-energy electron beams (Gamma, X-rays, alpha and beta particles) have sufficient
energy to cause ionization of molecules. They drive away electrons and split the
molecules into ions. Water molecules are split into hydroxyl radicals (OH-), electrons
and hydrogen ions (H+). OH- ions are highly reactive and destructive to normal
cellular compounds such as DNA and proteins. Thus ionizing radiations are used in
sterilization.
e.g. 36Cs, 60Co
Advantages: X-rays and Gamma rays have high penetrating power. Packed food and
medical equipments are sterilized by using x-rays and gamma rays.
Non-ionizing radiation
This includes ultraviolet (UV) rays. UV at a wavelength of 265 nm is most bactericidal.
Absorption of UV radiation produces chemical modification of nucleoproteins i.e.,
thymine dimer formation that leads to misleading of genetic codes. This mutation
impairs the total functions of the organism, consequently causing its death.
Advantages
It is used to maintain aseptic conditions in laminar air flow chamber, lab, hosp itals,
pharmaceuticals, industries etc., and also in the sterilization of water and air.
Disadvantage:
UV radiation has very little ability to penetrate matter and hence the micro organisms
on the surface of an object are destroyed.
III) Filtration
Filtration involves the passage of liquid or gas through a screen like material that has
spores small enough to retain the micro organism of certain size. It is used to sterilize
heat sensitive substance like enzyme solutions, bacterial toxins, certain biological
media, cell extract and some sugars. Various types of filters are available in different
grades of porosity. Vacuum or pressure is required to move the solutes through the
filter.
Involves the physical removal of all cells in aliquid or gas, especially important to
sterilize solutions which would be denatured by heat (eg: antibiotics, injectable drugs,
amino acids, vitamins etc.)
Advantages:
It si the best way to reduce microbial population in solutions of heat sensitive materials
and it is sued to sterilize liquid media, vitamin solutions, hormones, growth factors,
enzymes.
21
www.AgriMoon.Com
Disadvantages
Low temperature
Most organisms grow very little or not at all at 0O C. Store perishable foods at low
temperatures to slow rate of growth and consequent spoilage (eg: milk). Low
temperatures are not bactericidal. Psychrotrophs, rather tah true psychrophiles are the
usual cause of food spoilage in refrigerated foods.
Surface tension is a property of the surface of a liquid that allows it to resist an external
force. It is revealed, for example, in floating of some objects on the surface of water,
even though they are denser than water, and in the ability of some insects (e.g. water
striders) and even reptiles (basilisk) to run on the water surface. This property is caused
by cohesion of like molecules, and is responsible for many of the behaviors of liquids.
Surface tension has the dimension of force per unit length, or of energy per unit area.
The two are equivalentbut when referring to energy per unit of area, people use the
term surface energywhich is a more general term in the sense that it applies also
to solids and not just liquids.
In materials science, surface tension is used for either surface stress or surface free
energy.
22
Agricultural Microbiology
external osmotic pressure and a net flow of water into the cell. Through observation of
plasmolysis and deplasmolysis it is possible to determine the tonicity of the cell's
environment as well as the rate solute molecules cross the cellular membrane.
Chemical agents
Chemical that is used to kill or inhibit the growth and development of micro organisms
are called anti microbial agents. Disinfectants and antiseptics come under anti microbial
agents and are usually used on inanimate materials. The mechanism of action is
complex and non specific. It may act on lipid portion of cell membrane, oxidize or
reduce an important functional group of an enzyme, prevent certain bio synthesis or
cause extensive breakdown of DNA.
Antispetics
Microbicidal agents harmless enough to be applied to the skin and mucous membrane,
should not be taken internally. Eg: mercurails, silver nitrate, iodine solution, alcohols,
detergents.
Disinfectants
Agents that kill micro organisms, but not necessary their spores, not safe for application
to living tissues, they are used on inanimate objects such as tables, floors, utensils etc.
eg: Chlorine, hypochlorites, chlorine compounds, Lysol, copper sulfate, quaternary
ammonium compounds.
Phenol
Derivative of phenol like benzyl resorcinol, o-cresol, m-cresol, etc., are used as effective
disinfectants 5% aqueous solutions of phenols are used as disinfectant. It alters the
protein structure and leads to denaturation of proteins and enzymes. Also affects
permeability of cytoplasmic membrane. They readily kill vegetative cells of bacteria and
fungi but for spores.
Alcohol
Alcohol at 70% concentration is more effective. It brings about denaturation and
coagulation of protein. Ethanol is routinely used in laboratories to surface sterilize
worktables and hands of the researcher/ experiment.
23
www.AgriMoon.Com
Halogens
Halogens such as hypocholrites, choramines and povidone- iodine are used to sanitize
utensils, surface sterilize in animate objects, table surfaces and other instruments.
Heavy metals
Heavy metals such as mercuric chloride are also used for surface sterilization pu rposes.
Heavy metals acts as oxidizing agents and kill the micro organisms on the surface of the
object. Usually 0.1 % mercuric chloride is used in the laboratories to sterilize the surface
of worktable and explants.
Detergents
Detergents are those compounds that make water repellant surfaces more wettable.
There are two types of detergents viz., ionic and non ionic. Detergent soaps and other
synthetic detergents are used for washing/cleaning glass wares, table tops etc.,
Action Uses
Chemical
Ethanol (50 -70 %) Denatures proteins and solubilizes Anti septic used on skin
lipids.
Isopropanol (50 70 %) Denatures proteins and solubilizes Anti septic used on skin.
lipids.
Formaldehyde (8%) Reacts with NH2, SH and COOH Disinfectant, kills
groups. endopsores.
Tincture of Iodine ( 2% Inactivates proteins Antiseptic used on skin
in 70 % alcohol)
Chlorine (Cl2) gas Forms hypochlorous acid (HClO), a Dis infect drinking water,
strong oxidizing agent. general disinfectant.
Silver Nitrate (Ag No3) Precipitates proteins. General antiseptic and used
in the eyes of newborns.
Mercuric chloride Inactivates proteins by reacting Disinfectant although
with sulfide groups. occasionally used as an
antiseptic on skin.
Detergents (eg: Disrupts cell membranes. Skin antiseptics and
Quaternary ammonium disinfectants.
compounds)
Chemotherapeutic agents
Antimicrobial agents of synthetic origin useful in the treatment of microbial or viral
disease. Examples: sulfonilamides, isoniazid, ethambutol, AZT, chloramphenicol.
24
Agricultural Microbiology
Antibiotics
Antimicrobial agents produced by micro organisms that kill or inhibit other micro
organisms. This is the microbiologists definition. A more broadened definition of an
antibiotic includes many chemical of natural origin which has the effect to kill pr inhibit
the growth of other types cells. Since most clinically useful anti biotics are produced by
micro organisms and are used to kill or inhibit infectious bacteria we follow classic
definition.
Antibiotics are low molecular weight (non- protein) molecules produced as secondary
metabolites, mainly by micro organisms that live in the soil. Most of these micro
organisms form some type of a spore or other dormant cell, and there is thought to be
some relationship between anti biotic production and the process of sporulation.
Among the molds, the notable antibiotic producers are penicillium and
cephalosporium, which are the main source of the beta lactam antibiotics. In the
bacteria, the actinomycetes, notable streptomyces species, produce a variety of types of
anti biotics including the aminoglycosides (eg: streptomycin), macrolides (eg:
erythromycin) and the tetracycline. Endospore forming bacillus species produce
polypeptide anti biotics such as polymyxin and bactracin.
25
www.AgriMoon.Com
****** ******
26
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 04:
METABOLISM IN BACTERIA
Microbial Metabolism
Metabolism refers the sum of biochemical reactions required for energy
generation and the use of energy to synthesize cellular materials.
The energy generation component is referred as catabolism and the build up of
macromolecules and cell organelles are referred as anabolism.
During catabolism, the energy is changed from one compound to
another and finally conserved as high energy bonds of ATP.
ATP is the universal currency for energy. When energy is required for
anabolism, it may be sent as high energy bonds of ATP which has the value of 8 kcal per
mole.
Based on the source of carbon, the microbes can be divided into two groups namely,
autotrophs and heterotrophs. Autotrophs utilize CO2 as sole carbon source
and heterotrophs use organic carbon as sole carbon source.
27
www.AgriMoon.Com
bacteria to use glucose. All these path ways are fermentative type and substrate level
phosphorylation occurs.
28
Agricultural Microbiology
The Embden Meyerhof path way can lead to a wide array of end products depending
on the path ways taken in the reductive steps after the pyruvate formation.
The following are some of the such fermentations:
29
www.AgriMoon.Com
a. Tricarboxylic acid cycle (also known as citric acid cycle or Krebs cycle) The
pyruvate formed during glycolysis will be completely oxidized to 3 CO2 by the use of
this cycle. During oxidation of one pyruvate through TCA cycle, 4 NADH2, 1 FADH2
and 1 GTP are produced along with 3 CO2.
30
Agricultural Microbiology
d. A membrane bound ATPase enzyme: The proton motive force developed during
ETC leads to formation of ATP by enzyme ATPase present in the membrane. (As in the
diagram)
The table shows some aerobic and anaerobic respirations with specific examples:
31
www.AgriMoon.Com
In aerobic organisms, the terminal electron acceptor will be of O2. In some anaerobic
organisms, after the electron transport chain, instead of O2, some inorganic compounds
like sulphate, nitrate or some organic compounds like fumarate act as terminal electron
acceptor. Such type of respiration is referred as anaerobic respiration and the normal
O2 mediated respiration is referred as aerobic respiration. The above table shows some
anaerobic respiration with some terminal electron acceptors. The process is named
based on the compounds as sulphur reduction, denitrification and methanogenesis.
Energy generation by autotrophs.
Autotrophs use CO2 as their sole carbon source. There are two types such as
photoautotrophs and chemoautotrophs. Photoautotrophs use light as energy source and
CO2 as carbon source. Chemoautotrops use chemicals (especially inorganic) as energy
source and CO2 as carbon source.
For conversion of light energy to ATP, the bacteria possess light harvesting pigments.
They are chlorophyll a, carotenoids, phycobiliproteins (which are present in
cyanobacteria) and bacteriochlorophyll (which are present in purple sulphur bacteria).
In bacteria, there are two types of light reactions (conversion of light to ATP) and two
types of CO2 fixation occur.
32
Agricultural Microbiology
Since, the sulphur bacteria is an anaerobic bacterium, they use H2S instead of
H2O as electron donor. Since, there wont be any O2 evolution during
photosynthesis, referred as anoxygenic photosynthesis.
33
www.AgriMoon.Com
34
Agricultural Microbiology
Another way of CO2 fixation is by methanogens: They use CO2 as terminal electron
acceptor and forms CH4 (methane). They also fix by acetyl CoA pathway for fixing
CO2 .
Synopsis:
35
www.AgriMoon.Com
Oxygenic photosynthesis
Green bacteria Cyclic and non-cyclic Reverse TCA cycle
(Chlorobium) photophosphorylation
Oxygenic photosynthesis
The following diagram showing energy generation and CO2 fixation by different
chemolithotrophs:
36
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 05:
ATP GENERATION
The energy captured within ATP can then be harnessed to create order in the form of
biosynthetic reactions. In a hypothetical enzyme reaction that converts substrates AH
and BOH to AB and H2 O, the energy from ATP hydrolysis is first used to convert
BOH to a higher-energy intermediate, BOPO4. This compound is only transiently
formed, with the energy released during its decay used by the enzyme to form AB.
Thus, the energy released from the ATP hydrolysis reaction (large _G) is coupled to
the synthesis reaction (large +_G). In this way, the cell can progressively create order.
Although cells could transfer electrons directly from NADH to oxygen, this
would liberate all energy in NADH directly as heat.
NADH possesses lots of energy. If electrons are transferred directly to oxygen:
NADH + O2 NAD + H2O, delta Go' = - 218 kilojoules/mole
If NADH has ~218 kilojoules of energy, and it only takes 30.5 kilojoules to make
one ATP, could conceivably make 218/30.5 = ~ 7 ATP per NADH if energy
conversion were 100% efficient.
In practice, cells have evolved ways to get up to 40% efficiency (~ 3
ATP/NADH) under optimal circumstances.
Electron transport system (ETS) = membrane-bound pathway transferring
electrons from organic molecules to oxygen.
ETS moves both electrons and protons: electrons are passed from carrier to
carrier in the membrane, while protons are moved from inside to outside of
membrane
Net result: electrons enter ETS from carriers like NADH or FADH, wind up at
terminal oxidize, and get attached to oxygen.
ETS consists of 4 complexes, connected by mobile carriers (Coenzyme Q,
cytochrome c) that shuttle between complexes in membrane
37
www.AgriMoon.Com
As electrons flow through ETS, at certain steps protons (H+) are moved from
inside to outside of the membrane.
This builds up proton gradient; since + charges are removed from inside of cell, -
charge remains inside, mainly as OH- ions.
pH just outside membrane can reach 5.5, pH just inside membrane can reach 8.5 -
--> difference of 3 pH units, or 1000x concentration differential of H+ across
membrane. This represents potential energy stored up in proton gradient =
proton motive force.
Membrane is basically impermeable to protons, so gradient doesn't get
squandered away by leaky reentry.
ATP synthase protein complex contains only channels for proton entry. As
protons push in through channel, the base rotates. Specific binding sites allow
ADP + Pi ATP. This can be called chemiosmotic phosphorylation (assuming
chemiosmotic hypothesis is correct), or oxidative phosphorylation (makes no
assumption about mechanism.
38
Agricultural Microbiology
Oxidative phosphorylation
Differences between respiration in mitochondria (eukaryotes) and bacteria
(procaryotes)
In Eukaryotes:
In Prokaryotes:
Anaerobic respiration
39
www.AgriMoon.Com
Anaerobic respiration
Nitrate (NO3 -)
Second process is major pathway for loss of nitrogen compounds from soil,
return of nitrogen to atmosphere.
Pseudomonas species are common denitrifiers, widespread in soils. When
fertilized soils become flooded, oxygen is rapidly depleted, pseudomonads
switch to anaerobic respiration and can use up soil nitrate, leaving field in
unfertile state.
Note: Studied this in lab. Media must contain nitrate in addition to nutrients,
otherwise won't work. Also, in scavenger hunt at end of course, one target
microbe will be Pseudomonas, enrichment culture depends on its ability to
grown anaerobically using nitrate reduction.
Sulfate (SO42 -)
40
Agricultural Microbiology
1. To start cycle:
2. Acetyl-CoA (2-C) + oxaloacetate (4-C) citric acid (6-C)
3. Subsequent steps:
1. Convert citrate to isocitrate (still 6-C)
2. Oxidize alpha-ketoglutarate (5-C) + CO2 + NADH
3. Oxidize succinyl-CoA (4-C) + CO2 + NADH
4. SLP reaction: succinyl-CoA (4-C) + GDP succinate (4-C) + GTP (Note:
GTP can be interconverted with ADP to form ATP)
5. Oxidize fumarate (4-C) + FADH2 -- convert fumarate to malate
6. (6)oxidize again oxaloacetate (4-C) + NADH
4. Net yield: Acetyl-CoA (2-C) + 3 NAD+ + FAD 2 CO2 + 3 NADH + FADH2 +
ATP
5. TCA cycle completes the oxidation of carbons in pyruvate to most oxidized form
(CO2 ); removes electrons originally in C-H bonds to electron carriers NADH and
FADH for use in respiration machinery.
Catabolism of substances other than glucose: Many other possible C-sources for
catabolism beside glucose. In general, must convert these into molecules that can enter
into central metabolism, either in glycolysis or TCA cycle.
1. carbohydrates
1. Most abundant C-sources in most environments, most in various
polysaccharides (cellulose, starch, lignin, etc.)
2. To gain access to sugars, must first secrete hydrolytic enzymes that
break down glycosidic bonds in polysaccharides, produce mono-
and disaccharides that can be transported into cells.
3. Starch, glycogen -- easily hydrolyzed by amylases
4. Cellulose -- difficult to digest, very insoluble, tightly folded. Many
fungi, some bacteria produce cellulases.
5. Agar -- some marine bacteria produce agars
6. Once mono- or disaccharides are available, they are transported
into cell, converted into some typical glycolytic intermediate such
as glucose-6-phosphate, catabolized by glycolytic enzymes.
41
www.AgriMoon.Com
2. lipids
1. Biological lipids common as triglycerides, diglycerides.
2. To catabolize, bacteria secrete lipases, hydrolyze glycerides to free
fatty acids and glycerol.
3. Fatty acids attacked by Beta-oxidation pathway.
4. Using FAD and NAD+ to remove electrons, 2-C units are removed
as Acetyl-CoA, feed directly into central metabolism at TCA cycle
entry. Glycolysis pathway not involved (except for use in
synthesizing sugars needed for cell wall, running sections of
pathway in reverse).
3. proteins
1. Proteins must first be hydrolyzed by protease enzymes, to get
individual amino acids which can be transported into cells.
2. Amino acids all have common structure: NH2 - RCH - COOH.
3. 1st step in catabolism is to remove amino group (deamination),
often by swapping it with another substrate (transamination).
4. Typical example: glutamic acid (an AA) + pyruvate alpha-
ketoglutarate + alanine (= pyruvate + amino group). Now alpha-
KG can be oxidized in TCA cycle, since it is a TCA cycle
compound.
5. As excess amino groups accumulate, must be secreted as waste
products, possibly as ammonium ion (leads to alkaline pH).
****** ******
42
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 06:
MICROBIAL METABOLISM AUTOTROPHS
Overview of Autotrophy
Imagine being hungry, walking outside, taking off your shirt, lying in the sun for a
few hours, becoming totally full (fat even!), and being done eating. No stores, no lines,
no choices, just sunlight --- and the machinery of an autotroph --- and some CO2 and a
couple of other requirements (water --- and H2S or Hydrogen gas, if you happen to be
an anerobe)
Autotroph = gets all carbon from CO2, organic C not required (for C-source). Use
special metabolic cycle: Calvin-Benson cycle
Refers to C-source only; some organisms still require organic C as energy source
Calvin-Benson cycle
Summary
43
www.AgriMoon.Com
contains ~54 kcal/mole (from delta Go' for oxidation), then to make glucose costs 780
kcal/mole, more than the energy available by oxidizing glucose.
Conclusion: making sugar is expensive! Cell needs to supply large quantities of ATP
and NADPH.
Chemolithotrophs
Hydrogen Bacteria
Gain energy by oxidizing hydrogen gas:
H2 + NAD+ -------(hydrogenase enzyme)------> NADH + H+
alternative: electrons can be donated directly to ETS chain, bypassing NAD
Note: only need one special enzyme to carry this step out: hydrogenase.
Many different genera of bacteria include members that can induce hydrogenase.
When hydrogen disappears, back to heterotrophic life. Hydrogen bacteria are usually
facultative chemolithotrophs.
Sulfur Bacteria
44
Agricultural Microbiology
Nitrifying Bacteria
Very important soil organisms -- process all ammonia, nitrite in soils, break down
amino acids, nitrogen bases ---> ammonia (NH3)
Two different groups: one oxidizes ammonia, one oxidizes nitrite
Ex. 1: Nitrosomonas: 2 NH3 (ammonia) + 3 O2 -----> 2 HNO2 (nitrite) + 2 H2O
Ex. 2: Nitrobacter: 2 HNO2 (nitrite) + 2 O2 -----> 2 HNO3 (nitrate)
Note potential problem: redox potential for nitrite as electron donor is + 0.42 v., so can
easily pass electrons down to oxygen at + 0.82 v., reaction will be spontaneous.
Electrons can be passed through an electron transport system, make ATP by
chemiosmotic phosphorylation.
BUT --- how to make NADPH? (Remember, this an autotroph, needs both ATP and
NADPH to grow). How to get NADPH? The redox potential is much higher than
nitrite.
Solution: Reverse electron transport. Accumulate enough proton gradient by
oxidation of nitrite to force electrons back to carriers with higher redox potentials, all
the way back to NADH ---> NADPH. This works as long as concentrations of reduced
forms are kept very low, and NADPH is used up immediately to make glyceraldehyde-
3-phosphate. See handout
This is very inefficient process. Nitrobacter can have 18 hour generation time. But it
has no competition, so what's a little extra time?
Iron Bacteria
Phototrophs
Use energy from sunlight to get high energy electrons (attached to carriers high on
redox tower). Use CO2 and Calvin-Benson cycle to make all organic molecules.
45
www.AgriMoon.Com
46
Agricultural Microbiology
back to same place they started from --- this is non-cyclic electron flow. Path resembles
a letter "Z", so often called "Z-scheme" photosynthesis.
FERMENTATION
Alcoholic fermentation
Mixed acid fermentation: Some bacteria use several pathways, produce ethanol, formic
acid, acetic acid, lactic acid, succinic acid, CO2, and H2. Note lots of acid, lower pH than
many other fermentations. Note: ATP yield via mixed acid is ~2.5 ATP/glucose, a bit
higher than straight lactic acid fermentation
47
www.AgriMoon.Com
Respiration
****** ******
48
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 07:
BACTERIOPHAGES: STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF BACTERIAL VIRUSES
Typical phages have hollow heads (where the phage DNA or RNA is stored) and tunnel
tails, the tips of which have the ability to bind to specific molecules on the surface of
their target bacteria. The viral DNA is then injected through the tail into the host cell,
where it directs the production of progeny phages often over a hundred in half an hour.
These "young" phages burst from the host cell (killing it) and infect more bacteria.
Composition of bacteriophages
Although different bacteriophages may contain different materials they all contain
nucleic acid and protein. Depending upon the phage, the nucleic acid can be either
DNA or RNA but not both and it can exist in various forms. Bacteriophages have been
classified as:
49
www.AgriMoon.Com
The nucleic acids of phages often contain unusual or modified bases. These modified
bases protect phage nucleic acid from nucleases that break down host nucleic acids
during phage infection. The size of the nucleic acid varies depending upon the phage.
The simplest phages only have enough nucleic acid to code for 3-5 average size gene
products while the more complex phages may code for over 100 gene products.
The number of different kinds of protein and the amount of each kind of protein in the
phage particle will vary depending upon the phage. The simplest phages have many
copies of only one or two different proteins while more complex phages may have
many different kinds. The proteins function in infection and to protect the nucleic acid
from nucleases in the environment. Phages are also commonly employed in gene
cloning, especially those exhibiting lytic and lysogenic cycles.
Structure of bacteriophages
Bacteriophage comes in many different sizes and shapes. The basic structural features of
bacteriophages are (which depicts the phage called T4)
1. Size - T4 is among the largest phages; it is approximately 200 nm long and 80-100 nm
wide. Other phages are smaller. Most phages range in size from 24-200 nm in length.
2. Head or Capsid - All phages contain a head structure which can vary in size and
shape. Some are icosahedral (20 sides) others are filamentous. The head or capsid is
composed of many copies of one or more different proteins. Inside the head is found the
nucleic acid. The head acts as the protective covering for the nucleic acid.
50
Agricultural Microbiology
3. Tail - Many but not all phages have tails attached to the phage head. The tail is a
hollow tube through which the nucleic acid passes during infection. The size of the tail
can vary and some phages do not even have a tail structure. In the more complex
phages like T4 the tail is surrounded by a contractile sheath which contracts during
infection of the bacterium. At the end of the tail the more complex phages like T4 have a
base plate and one or more tail fibers attached to it. The base plate and tail fibers are
involved in the binding of the phage to the bacterial cell. Not all phages have base
plates and tail fibers. In these instances other structures are involved in binding of the
phage particle to the bacterium.
51
www.AgriMoon.Com
A. Adsorption
The first step in the infection process is the adsorption of the phage to the
bacterial cell. This step is mediated by the tail fibers or by some analogous structure on
those phages that lack tail fibers and it is reversible. The tail fibers attach to specific
receptors on the bacterial cell and the host specificity of the phage (i.e. the bacteria that
it is able to infect) is usually determined by the type of tail fibers that a phage has. The
nature of the bacterial receptor varies for different bacteria. Examples include proteins
on the outer surface of the bacterium, LPS, pili, and lipoprotein. These receptors are on
the bacteria for other purposes and phages have evolved to use these receptors for
infection.
B. Irreversible attachment
The attachment of the phage to the bacterium via the tail fibers is a weak one and is
reversible. Irreversible binding of phage to a bacterium is mediated by one or more of
the components of the base plate. Phages lacking base plates have other ways of
becoming tightly bound to the bacterial cell.VIE
C. Sheath Contraction
The irreversible binding of the phage to the bacterium results in the contraction of the
sheath (for those phages which have a sheath) and the hollow tail fiber is pushed
through the bacterial envelope. Phages that don't have contractile sheaths use other
mechanisms to get the phage particle through the bacterial envelope. Some phages have
enzymes that digest various components of the bacterial envelope.
52
Agricultural Microbiology
A. Definition - Lytic or virulent phages are phages which can only multiply on bacteria
and kill the cell by lysis at the end of the life cycle.
53
www.AgriMoon.Com
b. Intracellular Accumulation Phase - In this phase the nucleic acid and structural
proteins that have been made are assembled and infectious phage particles accumulate
within the cell.
c. Lysis and Release Phase - After a while the bacteria begin to lyse due to the
accumulation of the phage lysis protein and intracellular phage are released into the
medium. The number of particles released per infected bacteria may be as high as 1000.
54
Agricultural Microbiology
55
www.AgriMoon.Com
56
Agricultural Microbiology
5. Significance of Lysogeny
a. Model for animal virus transformation - Lysogeny is a model system for virus
transformation of animal cells
****** ******
57
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 08:
LYTIC AND LYSOGENIC CYCLES - PHAGE MULTIPLICATION CYCLE
A. Definition - Lytic or virulent phages are phages which can only multiply on bacteria
and kill the cell by lysis at the end of the life cycle.
Lytic or Virulent Phages
a. Eclipse period - During the eclipse phase, no infectious phage particles can be found
either inside or outside the bacterial cell. The phage nucleic acid takes over the host
biosynthetic machinery and phage specified m-RNA's and proteins are made. There is
an orderly expression of phage directed macromolecular synthesis, just as one sees in
animal virus infections. Early m-RNA's code for early proteins which are needed for
phage DNA synthesis and for shutting off host DNA, RNA and protein biosynthesis. In
some cases the early proteins actually degrade the host chromosome. After phage DNA
is made late m-RNA's and late proteins are made. The late proteins are the structural
proteins that comprise the phage as well as the proteins needed for lysis of the bacterial
cell.
58
Agricultural Microbiology
b. Intracellular Accumulation Phase - In this phase the nucleic acid and structural
proteins that have been made are assembled and infectious phage particles accumulate
within the cell.
c. Lysis and Release Phase - After a while the bacteria begin to lyse due to the
accumulation of the phage lysis protein and intracellular phage are released into the
medium. The number of particles released per infected bacteria may be as high as 1000.
59
www.AgriMoon.Com
60
Agricultural Microbiology
5. Significance of Lysogeny
a. Model for animal virus transformation - Lysogeny is a model system for virus
transformation of animal cells
b. Lysogenic conversion - When a cell becomes lysogenized, occasionally extra genes
carried by the phage get expressed in the cell. These genes can change the properties of
the bacterial cell. This process is called lysogenic or phage conversion. This can be of
significance clinically. e.g. Lysogenic phages have been shown to carry genes that can
modify the Salmonella O antigen, which is one of the major antigens to which the
immune response is directed. Toxin production by Corynebacterium diphtheriae is
mediated by a gene carried by a phage. Only those strain that have been converted by
lysogeny are pathogenic.
****** ******
61
www.AgriMoon.Com
A virus is a small infectious agent that can replicate only inside the living cells of
organisms. Most viruses are too small to be seen directly with a light microscope.
Viruses infect all types of organisms, from animals and plants to bacteria and archaea.
Since the initial discovery of tobacco mosaic virus by Martinus Beijerinck in 1898, about
5,000 viruses have been described in detail though there are millions of different types.
Viruses are found in almost every ecosystem on Earth and are the most abundant type
of biological entity. The study of viruses is known as virology, a sub-speciality
of microbiology.
Virus particles (known as virions) consist of two or three parts: the genetic
material made from either DNA or RNA, long molecules that carry genetic information;
aprotein coat that protects these genes; and in some cases an envelope of lipids that
surrounds the protein coat when they are outside a cell. The shapes of viruses range
from simple helical and icosahedral forms to more complex structures. The average
virus is about one one-hundredth the size of the average bacterium.
Virion Stage
62
Agricultural Microbiology
Infectious Stage
When virus infects a cell, nucleic acid must be uncoated and gain access to
metabolic machinery of cell.
Virus life cycle is characterized by:
o attachment
o penetration, with entry of nucleic acid into cell
o early expression of virus genes (either directly by translation, if virus
contains "+" RNA, or indirectly after transription and then translation)
o replication of virus nucleic acid
o synthesis of new virion components
o packaging and assembly of new virions
o exit from cell
Must grow virus on host cells to see anything. Can't grow virus without cells.
To quantify viruses, need some way to get flat surface of growing cells, allow
virus-infected cells to spread radially where present = plaque.
In bacterial cells this is easy. Spread "lawn" of bacteria on plate, add diluted
phage suspension or culture infected with phages. After 6-8 hours can see
plaques in E. coli.
In plant cells, can be easy. Example: Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV), make virus
dilution, rub over surface of tobacco leaf. After leaf growth, can observe plaque
areas.
In animal cells, not so easy. In 1960's, standard assay was to inoculate chicken
egg membranes of developing chick embryos, incubate for a week, cut open shell
and count plaques on membrane in the air sac. Lots of work to get statistically
reliable data!
In 1970's tissue culture became a viable alternative. Animal cells are cultured as
microbes in glass or plastic, use special medium that contains most of nutrients
present in blood. Cells will spread as monolayer on surface, can count plaques
after staining.
Taxonomy of viruses
63
www.AgriMoon.Com
Virion Structure
"Naked" viruses
o Helical viruses
Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is an example of a virus with helical
symmetry.
A helical array of identical protein subunits surrounds an RNA
molecule.
o Icosahedral viruses
built from
icosahedral (20-sided) assemblies of protein subunits.
Icosahedral shape is the minimum free energy structure for
producing a shell of equivalently bonded identical structures.
The simplest icosahedral capsids are built up by using 3 identical
subunits to form each triangular face, thereby requiring 60 identical
subunits to form a complete capsid. A few simple virus particles
are constructed in this way, e.g. bacteriophage X174.
Most icosahedral viruses have more than 60 subunits, usually some
multiple N times 60. N (called the triangulation number) can have
values of 1, 3, 4, 7, 9, 12, and more.
64
Agricultural Microbiology
"Enveloped" viruses
o "Naked" viruses require host death so viruses can be released. This may be
wasteful, and may cause premature death of host cell.
o Alternative strategy: shed virus particles by budding out, continued
release from cell membrane. Cell does not die (immediately), continues to
serve as factory for virus assembly and release. Virus typically acquires a
coating of host cell membrane, modified to include virus-specific proteins.
This is the "envelope". Virus may have additional protein coats (often
icosahedral) inside the envelope.
o Eventually host cell is too depleted to survive. Can see evidence of this as
"cytopathic effect" (CPE). Cell then dies.
o Examples of enveloped viruses include:
Retrovirus, including HIV
Paramyxovirus, including influenza
Rhabdovirus, including rabies
Filovirus. Although very "hot" in the news, these viruses are very
poorly characterized because of their extreme pathogenicity. They
are class IV pathogens, meaning they can only be cultured in total
containment facilities, of which there are only two in the U. S. They
are thought to be enveloped viruses with - RNA genomes.
65
www.AgriMoon.Com
Virus Genomes
Rule of Thumb: to estimate # of virus proteins, look at size of viral DNA or RNA.
For each 1000 base pairs, can guess the existence of 1 protein
o "typical" gene has 300-400 amino acids = ~ 1000 base pairs = 1 kbp (= 1
protein)
o small virus: SV40 => 5000 base pairs = 5 kbp ~ 5 proteins
o large virus: T4 => 200 kbp ~ 100-200 proteins
o by comparison, E. coli: 4000 kbp
Virus must attach to some specific cell surface protein or polysaccharide. But
these are specified by genes, and genes can mutate. In population, will always
find some variant strains with slightly different cell surfaces, may not bind virus
well.
When phage first discovered, thought this could be effective weapon against
bacterial disease. But frequency of resistant bacterial strains was too high, any
given strain of virus quickly became useless as resistant survivors propagated.
All bacteria seem to have nucleases that can attack DNA (called DNases) and
RNA (called RNases).
Exoenzymes attack free 5' or 3' ends of DNA, RNA molecules. Bacteria are
protected since DNA (and plasmids) are always circular. RNases are present, and
in fact destroy mRNA eventually (bacteria are always making new RNAs, very
responsive to enviroment changes).
Endonucleases are potentially lethal weapons. Called restriction enzymes. Attack
at specific sequence: e.g., in E. coli, enzyme called EcoRI will attack any sequence
with 5' G-A-A-T-T-C 3' (cuts DNA between G and A).
Why doesn't this kill cell? Because cell also has a second enzyme, called
modification enzyme, that protects all host DNA sequences of this type.
Typically adds a methyl (-CH3) group to one base at the cutting site. The
methylated base is modified, and protected from the restriction enzyme. When
foreign DNA comes into cell (e.g. virus DNA), if restriction site if present it will
be cut and ----- requiem for the virus.
66
Agricultural Microbiology
companies to harvest bacteria, purify restriction enzymes, and sell these to research and
applied industries.
Animal Viruses
Animal viruses are different in many respects from bacterial viruses. The host
cells are more complex, with multiple compartments and more complex
regulation of replication, transcription, and translation. Animal cells are not
bounded by cell walls.
Not surprisingly, animal viruses have evolved to overcome these problems. They
attach and enter by different mechanisms than phages, and their intracellular
activities include the ability to move between different compartments as needed.
Viral entry and exit from cells is very different from bacteriophages. Animal
viruses must enter through cell membrane, either by triggering endocytosis
pathway or by fusing viral envelope with the cell envelope.
Modifications are needed in both cellular and viral mRNA to allow recognition
and movement from nucleus to cytoplasm. For example:
o 3' tail of poly A
o 5' cap of methyl Guanosine triphosphate
Types of infection
Viruses in animal cells show a variety of infection patterns:
67
www.AgriMoon.Com
AIDS first recognized in 1981. Over 300,000 cases reported in U.S., over 8 million
in Africa, over 12 million infected world-wide.
View AIDS in perspective: a PBS website with current data on the AIDS
epidemic.
Host cell for the virus is CD4 (T-helper) cell, needed to activate antibody
production. In normal human, CD4 cells account for 70% of total T cells -- in
AIDS, number decreases, may reach 0% of T cell pool.
Progress of HIV infection only recently understood. Formerly thought that virus
became latent. Now discover that virus is anythig but latent: during infected
period (which can last 10 years), body is destroying ~ billion virions/day, and
virus is killing about 100 million CD4 T cells a day. HIV virus continues
replicating, and body rapidly replenishes lost T cells. Only when lymph nodes
wear out does virus gain the upper hand. See handout in class titled "Huge HIV
turnover helps explain drug resistance, pathogenicity".
Prognosis: with carefully selected treatments, better than before. Virtually eve ry
infected person dies sooner of later, usually within 10 years of infection. No cure
known, no vaccine yet available. Virus mutates rapidly, many strain variations.
Vaccines being tried, results mixed but preliminary.
68
Agricultural Microbiology
69
www.AgriMoon.Com
Viroids very small ss RNA genomes (~300 nucleotides). No coat, and RNA does
not encode protein. Known viroids cause diseases in plants because host cells
replicate the RNA.
Prions (protein infectious agent) do not have a nucleic acid genome. Prion
diseases are often called spongiform encephalopathies because of the post
mortem appearance of the brain with large vacuoles in the cortex and
cerebellum.
Pathology of brains infected with prion diseases:
o Scrapie (sheep)
o bovine spongiform encephalopathy (cows) = "mad cow disease"
o Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (humans)
Prion diseases in humans are probably primarily a genetic neurotoxic disorder.
Transmission of the disease to humans via infectious prions is likely to be rare.
The prion is a modified form of a normal cellular protein known as PrPc (for
cellular), found predominantly on the surface of neurons and thought to be
involved in synaptic function.
The modified form of PrPc (= prion) is known as PrPsc (for scrapie) which is relatively
resistant to proteases and accumulates in cytoplasmic vesicles of diseased individuals.
Prion protein may cause normal protein to fold abnormally.
****** ******
70
Agricultural Microbiology
Bacterial genetics is the study of gene structure and function in bacteria. Genetics itself
is concerned with determining the number, location, and character of the genes of an
organism. The process of replication is essential to understand in or manipulate the
genome and to understand the functioning of these organisms.
DNA REPLICATION
In general, DNA is replicated by uncoiling of the helix, strand separation by breaking of
the hydrogen bonds between the complementary strands, and synthesis of two new
strands by complementary base pairing. Replication begins at a specific site in the DNA
called the origin of replication.
71
www.AgriMoon.Com
Prokaryote Eukaryote
72
Agricultural Microbiology
studied.
The first step in performing genetic research on bacteria is to select mutants that differ
from wild-type cells in one or more genes. Then crosses are made between mutants and
wild types, or between two different mutants, to determine dominance-recessive
relationships, chromosomal location, and other properties. Various genetic methods are
used to select bacterial mutants, antibiotic-resistant cells, cells with specific growth
requirements, and so on.
73
www.AgriMoon.Com
Replica plating
The Ames test uses bacteria to test chemicalsfor capacity to cause mutations, as well as
carcinogens (cancer-causing chemicals). The procedure is as fiollows:
74
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 11:
GENE EXPRESSION
Transcription
The gene itself is typically a long
stretch of DNA. It is a blueprint for the
production of RNA. The production of
RNA copies of the DNA is
calledtranscription, and is performed
by RNA polymerase, which adds one
RNA nucleotide at a time to a growing
RNA strand. This RNA
iscomplementary to the template 3'
5' DNA strand,[1] which is itself
complementary to the coding 5' 3'
DNA strand. Therefore, the resulting
5' 3' RNA strand is identical to the
coding DNA strand with the exception that thymines are replaced with uracils in the
RNA. A coding DNA strand reading "ATG" is transcribed as "UAC" in RNA.
75
www.AgriMoon.Com
Translation
1. Initiation
2. 30S initiates binding to mRNA.
3. locates Shine-Dalgarno sequence (3-9 bases near 5' end of mRNA).
4. ribosome finds first AUG codon.
5. 50S ribosome binds.
6. tRNA carries N-formylmethione to first position
7. Elongation
8. 2 adjacent sites on ribosome: P and A site.A site accepts a new tRNA-AA.Psite
holds existing chain peptide transferred from P site tRNA to A-site AA
9. enzyme activity is in ribosomal RNA, not protein
10. also required: Energy (GTP) and elongation factors
11. Termination
12. reach a "stop codon" UAG, UAA, or UGA
13. no t-RNAs for release, but release factors required
14. Net cost: 4 phosphate bonds/amino acid added!
15. B. Genetic Code
1. AUG = universal "start" codon
2. UAG, UAA, UGA = "stop" codons
3. A few messages in bacteria use GUG as start, but still need Shine-
Dalgarno sequence, stil code for N-formylmethionine.
76
Agricultural Microbiology
1. genes with weak promoters are rarely transcribed.some such genes can be
activated by activator protein, causes RNA polymerase to bind more tightly.often
there are two components to such regulation: a sensor protein and an activator
protein. The activator protein is inactive until phosphorylated by the sensor, then
it activates transcription, gene product is made.
77
www.AgriMoon.Com
1.
Role of mRNA
Carries coding information for amino acids = codons, 3 adajacent nucleotide bases
Example: AAA, AGU, etc.leader sequence on mRNA (called Shine-Dalgarno sequence)
binds to complementar sequence on small ribosome subunit.
78
Agricultural Microbiology
Role of ribosome
acts as a "decoding box" or "tape player" for the information in mRNA30S & 50S
subunits (= 70S)30S has 16S RNA + 21 proteins.50S has 23S & 5S RNA + 34 proteins.
Role of tRNA
79
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 12:
RECOMBINATION IN BACTERIA
Transformation
Transformation is the process by which bacteria pick up DNA from their
environment. The DNA may come from a variety of sources, but most likely it is the
remnants of DNA from dead bacterial cells.
80
Agricultural Microbiology
Conjugation
Conjugation is a mating process involving bacteria. It involves transfer of genetic
information from one bacterial cell to another, and requires physical contact between
the two bacteria involved. The contact between the cells is via a protein tube called
an F or sex pilus, which is also the conduit for the transfer of the genetic material.
Basic conjugation involves two strains of bacteria: F+ and F-. The difference between
these two strains is the presence of a Fertility factor (or F factor) in the F+ cells. The F
factor is an episome that contains 19 genes and confers the ability to conjugate upon its
host cell. Genetic transfer in conjugation is from an F+ cell to an F- cell, and the genetic
material transferred is the F factor itself. Here is an overview of the process:
81
www.AgriMoon.Com
82
Agricultural Microbiology
As mentioned above, Hfr cells are formed when the F factor integrates into the bacterial
chromosome. This integration occurs at a random location.
The Hfr cell is still able to initiate conjugation with an F- cell.
When DNA transfer begins, the Hfr cell tries to transfer the entire bacterial
chromosome to the F- cell. The first DNA to be transferred is chromosomal DNA, and
thelast DNA to be transferred will be the F factor DNA.
Transfer of the bacterial chromosome is almost never complete. Pili are fairly fragile
structures, and shear forces tend to break the pilus, disrupting DNA transfer before the
entire chromosome can be transferred. As a result, the F factor itself is almost never
transferred to the recipient cell. This cell will remain F-. This cell will receive new DNA
from the Hfr cell however, and this new DNA can undergo recombination at a high
frequency with the host chromosome, because the DNA sequences will be homologous. In
fact, Hfr is short for 'high frequency recombination'. This recombination can result in gene
conversion events, if the transferred DNA and the corresponding region of host DNA
contain different alleles of the same gene.
83
www.AgriMoon.Com
F' Conjugation
Just as F factors can occasionally integrate into the bacterial chromosome (producing an
Hfr cell from an F+ cell), integrated F factors can occasionally excise themselves from
the bacterial chromosome. If this excision occurs properly, the Hfr cell becomes an F+
again. The excision is sometimes sloppy, however, and the F factor takes a small
segment of the bacterial chromosome with it. Some of the chromosomal DNA has
therefore become associated with the episome. When this happens, the cell is called an
F'.
Conjugation involving F' cells allows for the possibility of recombination, as shown
below:
The F' cell has a full complement of chromosomal genes; however, some of those genes
are now on the episome. F' cells are able to initiate conjugation with F- cells because of
the presence of the F factor.
When the F factor begins to transfer its DNA to the recipient cell, it will transfer the
small segment of chromosomal DNA as well.
Just as in the F+/F- mating, both cells wind up with a copy of the episome. The cell that
was F- now has the F factor (along with the piece of chromosomal DNA) and is
therefore now F'. This cell, however, also has a complete chromosome, so it will be
diploid for the segment of chromosomal DNA on the episome. Such a partially diploid
bacterial cell is called a merozygote. The chromosomal DNA on the episome can
undergo recombination at high frequency with its homologous sequence on the
chromosome.
Transduction
Transduction involves the exchange of DNA between bacteria using bacterial viruses
(bacteriophage) as an intermediate. There are two types of transduction, generalized
transduction and specialized transduction, which differ in their mechanism and in the
DNA that gets transferred. Before we can address these processes, however, we need to
understand the life cycle of a bacteriophage.
When a phage infects a bacterial cell, it injects its DNA into the cell. The viral DNA is
replicated numerous times, and viral genes are expressed, producing the proteins that
make up the viral capsid (or protein coat) and nucleases that digest the host genome
into fragments. The newly replicated viral DNA molecules are packaged into viral
capsids, and the bacterial cell is lysed (burst, and therefore killed), releasing hundreds
of viral progeny, which then go on to infect other cells.
Generalized Transduction
Sometimes, during bacteriophage replication, a mistake is made, and a fragment of the
host DNA gets packaged into a viral capsid. The resulting phage would be able to infect
another cell, but it would not have any viral genes, so it would not be able to replicate.
84
Agricultural Microbiology
The cell infected by this phage would survive, and would have an extra piece of
bacterial DNA present, which could undergo recombination with the host chromosome,
and perhaps cause a gene conversion event. Because it is a random fragment that gets
packaged into the viral capsid, any segment of the bacterial DNA can be transferred this
way (hence the name 'generalized').
Specialized Transduction
Specialized transduction occurs only with certain types of bacteriophage, such as
phage lambda. Lambda has the ability to establish what is called a lysogenic
infection in a bacterial cell. In a lysogenic infection, the viral DNA becomes
incorporated into the host chromosome, much as the F factor did in Hfr cells. In a
lysogenic infection by lambda, the DNA integrates into a very specific spot in the host
chromosome. The integrated viral DNA can remain integrated for long periods of time,
without disturbing the cell. Under the appropriate conditions (the regulation of this is
very complex, so don't worry about it), the viral DNA will excise itself from the
chromosome, and enter the lytic phase, in which the virus replicates just as described
above. The cell gets lysed, and new bacteriophage particles are released to infect other
cells. As with excision of the F factor (when Hfr cells become F'), sometimes the excision
of lambda is sloppy, and some bacteria DNA is excised along with it. When the
resulting virus infects another cell, it will pass that bacterial DNA into the cell, along
with its own DNA. If the infected cell survives (it can happen; there are bacterial
defenses against viral infection), it will contain a new piece of bacterial DNA, which can
undergo recombination and possibly cause gene conversion. Because the viral DNA
integrates into a specific location, when it excises, the bacterial DNA removed with it
will be the same in all cases. Therefore, the DNA transferred to the second cell will be
the same segment of the bacterial chromosome. This is why this process is called
'specialized' transduction.
85
www.AgriMoon.Com
Bacteria can exchange DNA through the process of conjugation. The F factor
confers the ability to initiate conjugation. If the F factor alone is transferred, no
86
Agricultural Microbiology
Bacteria do not reproduce sexually but can acquire new DNA through
transformation, transduction or conjugation.These natural processes have been
modified so that DNA can be deliberately incorporated into host microbes- even genes
that would normally never be transferred this way.
****** ******
87
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 13:
GENETIC ENGINEERING - PLASMIDS, EPISOMES
DNA is the blueprint for the individuality of an organism. The organism relies upon the
information stored in its DNA for the management of every biochemical process. The
life, growth and unique features of the organism depend on its DNA. The segments of
DNA which have been associated with specific features or functions of an organism are
called genes.
Molecular biologists have discovered many enzymes which change the structure of
DNA in living organisms. Some of these enzymes can cut and join strands of DNA.
Using such enzymes, scientists learned to cut specific genes from DNA and to build
customized DNA using these genes. They also learned about vectors, strands of DNA
such as viruses, which can infect a cell and insert themselves into its DNA.
With this knowledge, scientists started to build vectors which incorporated genes of
their choosing and used the new vectors to insert these genes into the DNA of living
organisms. Genetic engineers believe they can improve the foods we eat by doing this.
For example, tomatoes are sensitive to frost. This shortens their growing season. Fish,
on the other hand, survive in very cold water. Scientists identified a particular gene
which enables a flounder to resist cold and used the technology of genetic engineering
to insert this 'anti-freeze' gene into a tomato. This makes it possible to extend the
growing season of the tomato.
Plasmids: A plasmid is an extra chromosomal DNA molecule separate from the
chromosomal DNA which is capable of replicating independently from the
chromosomal DNA. In many cases, it is circular and double-stranded. Plasmids usually
occur naturally in bacteria, but are sometimes found in eukaryotic organisms (e.g.,
the 2-micrometre-ring in Saccharomyces cerevisiae).
Plasmid size varies from 1 to over 1,000 kilobase pairs (kbp). The number of identical
plasmids within a single cell can range anywhere from one to even thousands under
some circumstances. The number of plasmids in a cell generally remains constant from
generation to generation.
Properties of Plasmids
88
Agricultural Microbiology
Some Examples:
89
www.AgriMoon.Com
Classification of Plasmids
1. Transfer properties -
2. Phenotypic effects -
i) Origin - The origin of the R factors is not known. It is likely that they evolved for
other purposes and the advent of the antibiotic age provided a selective advantage for
their wide-spread dissemination.
ii) Structure - R plasmids are conjugative plasmids in which the genes for replication
and transfer are located on one part of the R factor and the resistance genes are located
90
Agricultural Microbiology
Transposons : Are sequences of DNA that can move or transpose themselves to new
positions within the genome of a single cell. The mechanism of transposition can be
either "copy and paste" or "cut and paste". Transposition can create phenotypically
significant mutations and alter the cell's genome size. Barbara McClintock's discovery of
these jumping genes early in her career earned her a Nobel prize in 1983. Transposons
make up a large fraction of the C-value of eukaryotic cells. Transposons are often
considered "junk DNA". In Oxytricha, which has a unique genetic system, they play a
critical role its development. Transposons are very useful to researchers as a means to
alter DNA inside a living organism.
****** ******
91
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 14:
GENETICALLY MODIFIED ORGANISM
The general principle of producing a GMO is to add a lot of genetic material into an
organism's genome to generate new traits. These techniques, generally known as
recombinant DNA technology, use DNA molecules from different sources, which are
combined into one molecule to create a new set of genes. This DNA is then transferred
into an organism, giving it modified or novel genes. Transgenic organisms, a subset of
GMOs, are organisms which have inserted DNA that originated in a different species.
For instance, the bacteria which cause tooth decay are called Streptococcus mutans. These
bacteria consume leftover sugars in the mouth, producing lactic acid that corrodes tooth
enamel and ultimately causes cavities. Scientists have recently modified Streptococcus
92
Agricultural Microbiology
It involves the isolation of DNA from a source other than the microorganism
itself. Source organisms span the world of living things, from microbes to plants
to animals, including humans. Scientists obtain source DNA in several different
ways: by disrupting cells of the target microbe (or plant or animal)
andfragmenting it into small pieces, by synthesizing it from an RNA template
using an enzyme called reverse transcriptase, or by knowing the specific gene
sequence and synthesizing it directly in the laboratory.
Once obtained, the pieces of DNA are inserted into a small genetic component
that has the ability to make copies of itself (replicate) independently from the
microbial genome. This self-replicating unit is called a cloning vector. Although
these genetic elements exist naturally in the form of plasmids and bacterial
viruses, many of the ones used today have been altered to improve their
properties for transferring genes. Restriction enzymes, which nick the donor
DNA and the cloning vector at specific sites, and DNA ligase, which attaches the
donor DNA to the cloning vector, allow the source genes of interest to be
inserted into the cloning vector without disrupting its ability to replicate.
The next step in the process is the introduction of the cloning vector with its
segment of new DNA into a living cell. Bacteria have the ability to transport
DNA into their cells in a process called transformation, and this ability is
commonly exploited to achieve this goal. Getting the DNA into the cell, however,
is only the beginning. No transformation is 100 percent efficient, and so the
bacteria that receive the gene(s) of interest must be separated from those that did
not. One of the best studied and most commonly used cloning vectors, pBR322, is
especially useful for this purpose, as it contains several genes for antibiotic
93
www.AgriMoon.Com
resistance. Hence, any cell transformed with DNA containing pBR322 will be
antibiotic resistant, and thus can be isolated from similar cells that have not be so
transformed by merely growing them in the presence of the appropriate drugs.
All that remains is to identify bacteria that are producing the product of the
desired gene(s), and cloning is a success.
The introduction of human genes into bacteria has several complicating wrinkles
that make cloning them even more challenging. For example, a bacterial gene
codes for a protein from start to finish in one long string of nucleotides, whereas
human cells have stretches of noncoding nucleotides called introns within their
genes. Bacteria do not have the same ability as human cells to remove these
introns when producing proteins from the gene, and if the introns are not
removed, the intended protein cannot be produced. This, along with other
complications, has been overcome using many of the tools of genetic
engineering.
Uses of GMOs: Examples of GMOs are highly diverse, and include transgenic
(genetically modified by recombinant DNA methods) animals such as mice, fish,
transgenic plants, or various microbes, such as fungi and bacteria. The generation and
use of GMOs has many reasons, chief among them are their use in research that
addresses fundamental or applied questions in biology or medicine, for the production
of pharmaceuticals and industrial enzymes, and for direct, and often controversial,
applications aimed at improving human health (e.g., gene therapy) or agriculture (e.g.,
golden rice). The term "genetically modified organism" does not always imply, but can
include, targeted insertions of genes from one into another species. For example, a gene
from a jellyfish, encoding a fluorescent protein called GFP, can be physically linked and
thus co-expressed with mammalian genes to identify the location of the protein
encoded by the GFP-tagged gene in the mammalian cell. These and other methods are
useful and indispensable tools for biologists in many areas of research, including those
that study the mechanisms of human and other diseases or fundamental biological
processes in eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells.
Transgenic microbes:
Bacteria were the first organisms to be modified in the laboratory, due to their simple
genetics. These organisms are now used in a variety of tasks, and are particularly
important in producing large amounts of pure human proteins for use in medicine.
94
Agricultural Microbiology
Insulin
Interferon
Hepatitis B vaccine
Tissue plasminogen activator
Human growth hormone
Ice-minus bacteria
Commercial Applications
95
www.AgriMoon.Com
Ananda Chakrabarty created one of the first microbes of this nature in the early
1970s. He introduced genes from several different bacteria into a strain
ofBurkholderia cepacia, giving it the ability to degrade toxic compounds found in
petroleum. This microbe offered a potential alternative to skimming and
absorbing spilled oil. Chakrabarty's genetically modified bacterium has never
been used, however, due to public concerns about the release of genetically
engineered microbes into the environment. The microbe did, on the other hand,
play an important role in establishing the biotechnology industry. The U.S.
Patent Office granted Chakrabarty the first patent ever for the construction and
use of a genetically engineered bacterium. This established a precedent allowing
biotechnology companies to protect their "inventions" in the same way chemical
and pharmaceutical companies have done in the past.
Transgenic animals
Transgenic animals are used as experimental models to perform phenotypic tests
with genes whose function is unknown or to generate animals that are susceptible to
certain compounds or stresses for testing in biomedical research. Other applications
include the production of human hormones, such as insulin. Frequently used in genetic
research are transgenic fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) as genetic models to study the
effects of genetic changes on development. Transgenic mice are often used to study
cellular and tissue-specific responses to disease.
Transgenic plants
Transgenic plants have been developed for various purposes. Most of transgenic
plants were created for research purposes and were not intended for eventual
commercialization. From these few which have reached the market the most common
transgenic traits include 1) resistance to pests or herbicides, 2) improved product
shelflife. In the near future crops with improved nutritional value and with resitance to
harsh environmental conditions might reach the marketplace. Since the first commercial
cultivation of GM plants in 1996, GM plants tolerant to the herbicides glufosinate or
glyphosate, and producing the Bt toxin, an insecticide, have dominated the agriculutral
96
Agricultural Microbiology
seed market for corn and other crops (soybean, cotton). Recently, a new generation of
GM plants promising benefits for consumers and industry purposes is entering the
market. Whenever GM plants are grown on open fields without containment there are
risks that the modification will escape into the general environment. Most countries
require biosafety studies prior to the approval of a new GM plant release, usually
followed by a monitoring programme to detect environmental impacts. Especially in
Europe, the coexistence of GM plants with conventional and organic crops has raised
many concerns. Since there is separate legislation for GM crops and a high demand
from consumers for the freedom of choice between GM and non-GM foods, measures
are required to separate foods and feed produced from GMO plants from conventional
and organic foods. European research programmes such as Co-Extra, Transcontainer
and SIGMEA are investigating appropriate tools and rules.
The use of GMOs has sparked significant controversy in many areas. Some groups
or individuals see the generation and use of GMO as intolerable meddling with
biological states or processes that have naturally evolved over long periods of time
(although many crops and animals have been modified by humans via unnatural
selection over the last several thousand years), while others are concerned about the
limitations of modern science to fully comprehend all of the potential negative
ramifications of genetic manipulation.
While some groups advocate the complete prohibition of GMOs, others call for
mandatory labeling of genetically modified food or other products. Other controversies
include the definition of patent and property pertaining to products of genetic
engineering and the possibility of unforeseen local and global effects as a result of
transgenic organisms proliferating. The basic ethical issues involved in genetic research
are discussed in the article on genetic engineering.
****** ******
97
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 15:
SOIL MICROBIOLOGY: MICROBIAL GROUPS IN SOIL
The field of soil microbiology was explored during the very last part of 19th century.
The establishment of the principal roles that microorganisms play in the biologically
important cycles of matter on earth: the cycles of nitrogen, sulphur and carbon was
largely the work of two men, S. Winogradsky (1856-1953) and M.W. Beijerinck (1851
1931). S. Winogradsky, Russian and regarded by many as the founder of soil
microbiology, discovered nitryfiying bacteria (1890-91); described the microbial
oxidation of H2S and sulphur (1887); developed the contributed to the studies of
reduction of nitrate and symbiotic nitrogen fixation; and, originated the nutritional
classification of soil microorganisms into autochtonous (humus utilizers) and
zymogenous (opportunistic) groups.
Almost equally important was the work of M.W. Beijerinck, a Hollander, who isolated
the agents of symbiotic (1888) and non-symbiotic aerobic (1901) nitrogen fixation.
However, the greatest contribution of Beijerinck was a new and profoundly important
technique: enrichment culture technique: to isolate and study various physiological
types of various microorganisms from natural samples through the use of specific
culture media and incubation conditions.
Bacteria- more dominant group of microorganisms in the soil and equal to one half of
the microbial biomass in soil. Majority are Heterotrophs. (Common soil bacteria -
Arthrobacter, Bacillus, Clostridium, Micrococcus).
98
Agricultural Microbiology
SPHERICAL BACTERIA
Actinomycetes - intermediate group between bacteria and fungi. Numerous and widely
distributed in soil. Abundance is next to bacteria. 104 - 108/g soil. 70% of soil
actinomycetes are Streptomyces. Many of them are known to produce antibiotics.
Population increases with depth of soil.
Actinomycetes - intermediate group between bacteria and fungi. Numerous and widely
distributed in soil. Abundance is next to bacteria. 104 - 108/g soil. 70% of soil
actinomycetes are Streptomyces. Many of them are known to produce antibiotics.
99
www.AgriMoon.Com
100
Agricultural Microbiology
101
www.AgriMoon.Com
Algae found in most of the soils in number ranges from 100 to 10,000 per g.
102
Agricultural Microbiology
Importance
103
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 16:
MICROBIAL TRANSFORMATIONS OF CARBON
The term soil generally refers to the loose material of the earth surface and is the region
that supports the plant life. It consists of five major components such as mineral matter,
water, air, organic matter and living organisms. The proportion of these components
varies with soil type and other soil conditions. To maintain the level of these
components it is essential that they undergo a regular process of recycling. This process
of recycling through various transformations is brought about by different
microorganism.
A- PS
B- Respiration / plant
C- Respiration / Animals
D- Autotrophs
E- Respiration / Microbial mineralization
104
Agricultural Microbiology
The most important element in the biological realm and substance that serve as the
cornerstone of the cell structure is carbon. It constituents about 40-50% of all living
organisms, yet the ultimate source is the CO2 that exist in a perennially short supply,
only 0.03% of the earths atmosphere, which undergo a cyclic change from an oxidized
to reduced state.
Carbon (CO2) is constantly (reduced into organic carbon compounds) being fixed into
organic form by photosynthetic organisms (photosynthesis). Once bound, the carbon
becomes unavailable for use in generation of new plant life. It is thus essential for the
carbonaceous materials to be decomposed and returned to the atmosphere. It is
estimated that 1.3x1014 kg CO2 is fixed annually in the biosphere. To the lesser extent
CO2 is also fixed through the agency of photosynthetic bacteria and other
chemolithotrophs with the convertion of so much of the plant available carbon to
organic form each year and the limited supply in the air, it is apparent that the major
plant nutrient element would become exhausted in the absence of microbial
transformation.
The carbon cycle revolves about CO2 and its fixation and regeneration. The green plants
utilize CO2 as their sole carbon source, and the carbonaceous matter synthesized serves
to supply carbon to other heterotrophic organisms and animals. Upon the death of
plants and animals, microbes assume a dominant role in carbon cycle. The dead tissues
are degraded and transformed into microbial cells and humus or soil organic fraction.
Further decomposition of these materials leads to the production of CO2 and once again
it is recycled.
105
www.AgriMoon.Com
As the plant ages, the content of water soluble constituents, proteins and minerals
decreases and the % of abundance of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin rises.
Soil organic matter comprises residues of plant and animals and these compounds
occur in soil in close combination with inorganic substances. Animals and plant
residues are made up of complex carbohydrates, simple sugars, starch, cellulose,
hemicellulose, pectins, gums, mucilage, proteins fats, oils, waxes, resins, alcohols,
aldehydes , ketones, organic acids, lignin, phenols, tannins, hydrocarbons, alkaloids,
pigments etc.
The soil microorganism play important role in the decomposition of soil organic
matter.
Bacteria are the dominant group mostly heterotrophic organisms (use energy
from organic sources such as sugars, starch, cellulose and protein) are
involved. Autotrophic organism which occupy a small portion of the biomass in
soil (and use inorganic sources such as Fe and S) are not directly involved in
organic matter decomposition.
Actinomycetes grow on complex substances such as keratin, chitin and other
complex polysaccharides and play active role in humus formation.
Soil fungi are mostly heterotrophos and use organic residues easily
Soil algae contribute a small amount of organic matter through their biomass, but
they do not have any active role in organic matter decomposition.
106
Agricultural Microbiology
Hence only heterotrophs are actively involved in the process of decomposition. The
relationship between organic matter and plant growth may be direct or indirect.
Carbon assimilation
The process of converting substrate to protoplasmic carbon is known as assimilation.
Under aerobic conditions 20-40% of the substrate carbon is assimilated, the remainder is
released as CO2. Fungi are more efficient, in their metabolism, since they convert
carbon into cell carbon as filaments and release less of CO2. 30-40% of which is used to
form new mycelium during the decomposition. Compared to fungi, bacteira are less
efficient. Aerobic bacteria are less efficient than anerobic bacteria.
C. Mineralization
Immobilization
Assimilation of nutrients and is the mechanism by which micro organism reduce the
quantity of plant available nutrient in soil. Mineralization is considered well than
immobilization.
During the decomposition of organic matter three separate simultaneous processes can
be distinguished. The important changes during decomposition are:
1. Plant and animal tissues constituents disappear under the influence of enzymes
2. Synthesis of new microbial cells so that proteins, polysaccharides and nucleic
acids typical of bacteria and fungi appear.
3. Third, certain end products of the breakdown are excreted into surroundings
there to accumulate or to be further metabolized.
107
www.AgriMoon.Com
The end products of decomposition are - CO2, H2O, NO3, SO4, CH4, NH4 and H2S
depending on the availability of air.
Factors influencing the organic matter decomposition
C: N ratio
108
Agricultural Microbiology
109
www.AgriMoon.Com
Humus
A dark coloured and fairly stable soil organic matter with known and unknown
physical and chemical properties
It is an integral part of the organic matter complex in soil
Humus can be defined as lingo protein complex containing approximately
45 % - lignin compounds
35% - amino acids
11% - carbohydrates
4% - cellulose
7% - Hemicellulose
3% - fats, wax, resins
6% - other miscellaneous substances, including plant growth substances and inhibitors.
Age and composition of the humus are dependent on its origin and environment.
Bacterial and algal protoplasm contribute a good deal to the nutritive value of
humus
Soil micro organism take part in humus formation. Some fungi such
as Penicillium, Aspergillus and actinomycetes produce dark humus like substances
which serve as structural units for the synthesis of humic substances.
Improved seed germination, root growth, uptake of minerals by plants and other
physiological effects on plant growth
Increases the enzyme activities involved in plant metabolism. Since humic acid
serves as hydrogen acceptors.
Increases the cytochrome oxidase activity in root systems results in growth
stimulatory effect (on roots)
Chelating effect on trace elements Fe uptake by roots
Vigour and yield of plants enhanced
Humic acid known to influence the grown and proliferation of micro organism
Aspergillus niger, Peni, Bacillus sp., Azotobacter are enhanced
The organic fraction of soil, often termed humus. It is a product of synthetic and
decomposing activities of the microflora. Since it contains the organic C and N needed
for microbial development, it is the dominant food reservoir. Because humus is both a
product of microbial metabolism and an important food source, the organic fraction is
of special interest.
110
Agricultural Microbiology
Humus formation
Once the plant or animal remains fall on or are incorporated into the soil, they
are subjected to decomposition
From the original residues, a variety of products are formed
As the original materials and the initial products undergo further decomposition,
they are converted to brown or black organic complexes
At this stage any trace of the original remains no longer remains
The native organic fraction originates from two sources: the original plant debris
entering the soil and the micro organism with in the soil body. The micro
organism in soil body, work upon the former and synthesize microbial
protoplasm and new compounds that become part of the organic fraction.
Humus exist in a dynamic state
Chemistry of humus is complex
It has been pointed out that the organic fraction is derived from
Degradation processes
(1) Cellulose is a CH2O composed of glucose units bound by -linkage at carbon 1 and
4 of the sugar molecule. The cellulose concentration of higher plants is never fixed and
the concentration. It is a polymer of glucose and is might abundant organic material in
nature changes with age and type of plants. Woody materials have more cellulose and
111
www.AgriMoon.Com
succulent tissues had poor, but the concentration increases as the plant matures.
Cellulose breakdown in soil is influenced by several environmental factors.
Aerobic organism converts cellulose to 2 major products: CO2 + cell substance, but
certain group releases small amount of organic acids. It is however resistant to
microbial decomposition. When cellulose is associated with pentosans (xylan,
mannans) it undergoes rapid decomposition. When associated with lignin, the
decomposition rate is very low. Degradation is by the enzymes that converts cellulose
into glucose. (Exoenzymes)
Exoglucanase
Endoglucanase
- glucosidase (cellulse complex)
Exo glucanase
Native cellulose Amorphos cellulose +
cellobiose
Endoglucanase Endogluconase
-glucosidase
D- Glucose Cellobiose
(cellobiase)
Most cellulolytic bacteria do not excrete significant amounts of cellulase but fungi are
found to excrete these enzymes. The soluble sugars released by enzymatic hydrolysis
are later utilized by the same or other micro organism for biosynthetic purpose.
(2) Hemicellulose
It is a polymer of simple sugars such as pentose, hexose and uronic acids. They may be
either homo or hetero polymers. When they are added to soil, degradation takes place
at faster rate in initial stages. The hemicelluloses such as mannans are decomposed
rapidly while galactons (polymer of galactose) are decomposed slowly. Many soil
micro organisms utilize hemicellulose in both aerobic as well as anaerobic conditions.
The microbial degradation occurs through the agency of extracellular enzymes called
hemicellulases.
(3) Lignin
Lignin is the third most abundant costituent of plants. It consists of heterocyclic
aromatic organic molecules containing C, H and O. The degradation is very slow and
rate of decomposition depends on the presence of other compounds such as cellulose
and hemicellulose acid. Lignin is highly resistant to microbial degradation.
Degradation is a complex process.
112
Agricultural Microbiology
****** ******
113
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 17:
MICROBIAL TRANSFORMATIONS OF NITROGEN, PHOSPHORUS AND
SULPHUR
114
Agricultural Microbiology
NitrogenCycle
A - Ammonium E- Immobilization
B - Mineralization F- Denitrification
C - Nitrification G- N2 Fixation (Non-symbiotic)
D - Nitrate reduction H- N2 fixation (Symbiotic )
I.
Nitrog
en
minera
lizatio
n
The
conver
sion of organic N to the more mobile, inorganic state is known as nitrogen
mineralization. As a consequence of mineralization, ammonium and nitrate are
generated and organic N disappears. This takes place in two distinct microbiological
steps.
115
www.AgriMoon.Com
1. Ammonification
It is the process of mineralization in which proteins, nucleic acids and other organic
components are degraded by micro organism with the eventual liberation of ammonia.
This is called ammonification. A part of the liberated ammonia is assimilated by the
micro organism themselves. The first step in ammonication process is the hydrolysis of
proteins, nucleic acids and other organic nitrogenous compounds into amino acids
(proteolysis). The amino compounds are then deaminated to yield ammonia.
Ammonification usually occurs under aerobic conditions while under anerobic
conditions protein decomposition leads to conversion of ammonia into amines and
related compounds (eg) clostridium. The anaerobic decomposition of protein called as
putrefaction. These amines are subsequently oxidized in the presence of O2 to release
ammonia.
Break down of nitrogenous substance is brought about by the activity of a multitude of
microbial species.
Almost all bacteria, actinomycetes and fungi can bring about proteolysis and the amino
acids produced are utilized for the growth of these organisms.
(2) Nitrification
The biological oxidation of ammonium salts (in soil) to nitrites and the subsequent
oxidation of nitrites to nitrates is called as nitrification. i.e. the biological convention of
N in soil from a reduced to a more oxidized state, called nitrification.
Nitrification occurs in two steps;
First ammonia is oxidized to nitrite.
2 NH3 + 1 H2O2 NO2- + 2H+H2O-Nitrosofication
This change is brought about by chemoautotrophic bacteria of the
genera Nitrosomonas, Nitrosolobus, Nitrosococus, Nitrosospira. These bacteria obtain their
energy requirement by the oxidation of NH4+ to NO-2. Among the
nitrifiers Nitrosomonas are most important in soils.
Some heteotrophs involved
Streptomyces, Nocardia
Second step
Nitrite is further oxidized to nitrate
HNO2 + O 2 HNO3 .
Organisms: Nitrobacter, Aspergillus, Penicillium, Cephalosporium.
Factors influencing the growth of nitrifying bacteria in soil
Levels of ammonia and nitrite, aeration, moisture, temperature, pH and organic matter.
In acid soils nitrification is poor. Waterlogged soils deficient in O 2 not congenial
for nitrification.
3. Denitrification
The convention of nitrate and nitrite into molecular N2 or nitrous oxide through
microbial processes is known as denitrification. Certain bacteria are capable of using
nitrate as the terminal electron acceptor under anaerobic conditions. This is
116
Agricultural Microbiology
Fallow soils flooded with water are more congenial for denitrification than well
drained and continuously cropped soils.
Though it is a undesirable reaction in point of view of plant nutrition, but have
ecological importance. Because with out denitrification the supply of N on the
earth world have got depleted and NO3 would have accumulated.
High concentration of NO3 are toxic, denitrification is a mechanism by which
some of the N is released back to the atmosphere.
5. Nitrate reduction
The reverse of nitrification process. That is the reduction of nitrate to nitrite and then
ammonia. Since organisms are able to obtain cellular Nth ammonia assimilation, the
process is called as assimilatory nitrate reduction.
HNO3 + 4H2 NH3 + 3H2O
117
www.AgriMoon.Com
In cultivated soil P present in abundant about 1100 kg/ha but most of them as not
available to plants; only about 1% of the total
P is in available form.
PO43- in rocks and in cells
118
Agricultural Microbiology
P is solubilized by the production of organic acids. The acids convert Ca3 (PO4)2
to di and monobasic phosphates and releases P to plants.
Solubilization of phosphates by plant roots & micro organism is dependent on
soil pH. In neutrals and alkaline soils having a content of calcium, precipitation
of CaPO4 takes place. Micro organism and plant root readily dissolve such PO4
and make them available to plants.
On contrary, acid soils are generally poor in Ca ions and phosphates and
precipitated in the form of ferric or aluminum compounds which are not
soluble. There, it is solubilized by the addition of PO4 solublizing micro
organism.
Phosphorus exists mainly as apatides, with the basic formula M10 (PO4)6 X2.
Commonly the mineral (M) is Ca, less often Al or Fe. The anion (X) is either F- or
Cl- or OH- or CO2-3. Diverse combinations of M and X results in 200 forms of P.
119
www.AgriMoon.Com
(3) Immobilization
Process of assimilation of P into microbial nucleic acids, phospholipids or other
protoplasmic substances is called immobilization. It leads to the accumulation of non
utilizable forms of the element.
P accounts for 0.5-1.0% of fungus mycelium and 1.0 to 3.0% of the dry weight of the
bacteria and actinomycetes.
Reductive process, reductive pathway has also been functioned. PO4 is reduced to
phosphite and hypophosphite.
H3PO4 H3PO3 H3PO2
Clostridium butyricum, E. coli form phosphite and hypophosphite from orthophosphate.
It is biochemically analogue to the process of denitirification. Only little information is
available about this process.
P exist in an organic form in the protoplasm on the death of living organism, this (P) is
changed to inorganic phosphoric acid. This is soon converted into insoluble salts of Ca,
Fe, Mg and Al. Phosphorus thus alternates between organic and inorganic, and soluble
and insoluble forms. In soluble P is solubilized by various acids produced by micro
organism.
Microbial activities involved in the cycling of C, N and P are absolutely essential for
maintenance of soil fertility.
II. Sulphur cycle
Sulphur like N, is an essential element for all living systems because of its inert nature,
is not utilized by plants. To be used first S has to to be oxidized or reduced. In soil, it
occurs both organic (S containing amino acids, vitamins ) as well as inorganic forms
(Sulphur, sulphates etc., ) .
Four distinct transformations are recognized
120
Agricultural Microbiology
Mineralization
Conversion of organic bound S into inorganic state, mediated through M.O. The
released S in either absorbed by plants or escaped into atmosphere in the form of oxides
Oxidation
121
www.AgriMoon.Com
Importance of Thiobacillus
Produces Sulphuric acid ,lower down the soil pH Hence used in controlling
plant disease
Apple and Potato scab Streptomyces scabis ,Sweet potato rot S. ipomea
S+ Thiobacillus application is used for the control
Remediation of alkali soil
Increases the solubilization of other nutrients (P,K,Ca,Mn,Al and Mg )
Preparation of biosuper- Rock phosphate + T.thiooxidans and S--- Australia
Lipmans process- Compost preparation
Soil + manure + elemental S + rock phosphate
Sulphate reduction
Reduces inorganic sulphate into Hydrogen sulphide reduces the availability of S
for plant nutrition
****** ******
122
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 18:
BIOLOGICAL NITROGEN FIXATION
123
www.AgriMoon.Com
I. Rhizobium
II. Bradyrhizobium
B. japonicum Soybean
B. spp Cowpea group
Azotobacter - Aerobic
Beijerinckia
Clostridium Anaerobic
Cyanobacteria (Blue green algae) etc.,
124
Agricultural Microbiology
Species of Azospirillum
lipoferum
brasilense
amazonense
halopareferans
irkense
A.largomobilis
Species of Azotobacter
chroococcum
vinelandii
beijerinkii
paspali
agilis
insignis
macrocytogens
pinnata
filiculoides
microphylla
caroliniana
mexicana
nilotica
Nitrogen fixation
Process of N2 fixation
The process of N2 fixation is mediated by the enzyme, called nitrogenase (which
mediates the reduction of N2 to ammonia) first, this enzyme was extracted from the
anaerobic di nitrogen fixer Clostridum pasteurianum. Latter, this has been isolated form
most other N2 fixing bacteria.
The mechanism of N2 fixation appears to be quite similar in most N2 fixing
prokaryotes. The enzyme has been fairly well characterized and the enzymes from
125
www.AgriMoon.Com
these different systems share common properties allowing a unified single doscription
of nitrogenase.
Nitrogenase
Nitrogeanse is a functional enzyme which reduces N2 to ammonia and depends on
energy source from ATP. The nitrogenase has two components one containing Mo-Fe,
designated as Mo Fe protein and the other Fe protein . Two components are
necessary for the nitrogenase activity.
Mo-Fe protein
Consists of 4 subunits and having the molecular not of 22,0000 or 270,000 daltons and it
is the big component.
Fe-protein
Smaller component, contains 2 subunits, molecular weight 60,000 daltons.
Ammonia is the end product of N2 fixation. The over all reaction is as follows.
ATP
N2 + 3H2 2 NH3
ATP ADP
generation ATP
N=N
Electron
Energy source carriers Nitrogenase
complex
NH3
Nitrogenase can also reduce C2 H2 C2H4
Hydrolysis of ATP into ADP with electron transfer from a reduced electron donor
(Ferridoxin, Flavodoxin) is coupled to reduce N2 to 2NH3. The ammonia is the first
stable product of fixation and it is assimilated by GS-GOGAT pathway.
126
Agricultural Microbiology
NADH
NADPH e- e- e- e-
Ferridoxin Flarodoxin Ubiquinone
APP
EMP e- Carrier proteins NII NI
EDP
Glycolysis
Nitrogenase is O2 labile various protection mechanism are operating in different
N2 fixing systems.
Mechanism
Reduction takes place on the surface of the enzyme
Six electrons are required to reduce one mole of N to two moles of ammonia.
127
www.AgriMoon.Com
It is postulated that, atoms of N2 are separated thrh charge in the valency of metal ion
(mo) bound to the enzyme involved in reduction of N2. For every electron transfer, 4
ATP mole are required.
128
Agricultural Microbiology
The energy requirement for BNF is very high and it is a major factor determines
the amount of N2 fixed. In, Azotobacter the rate depends on amount of available carbon.
In symbiotic N2 fixers since photosynthesis is the ultimate source of energy the rate of
N2 fixation is influenced by the factors that effect photosynthesis and rate of
translocating photosynthates to the N2 fixing system.
Nitrogenase protection mechansims
Leaching
20 to 50%of fertilizer N. The most striking loss of N in rice soils where more than half of
the fertilizer N applied get lost through leaching.
Volatalization
Another factor is the volatalizaiotn of ammonia in soil 5-20%.
Fixation of ammonium in soils is the minor contributory factor to overall loss of N2
available for plant growth.
Such losses of N by physical causes and by nitrification and denitirfication process can
be controlled by the application of certain chemicals. Some chemicals have been
designed to control the rate of release of nutrient from nitrogenous fertilizers, while
others retard nitrification in soil by controlling the activity of nitrifying bacteria.
129
www.AgriMoon.Com
Urea from...
isobutyeldene diurea
Fertilizers, sparingly soluble in water can regulate the release
Crotonilidene
of N from fertilizers
diurea
S coated urea
b. Nitrification inhibitors
These are substituted with pyridines, pyrimidines, anilines and isothiocyanates,
Examples
1. 2 chloro 6 (tricholormethyl) pyridine (N serve )
2. 2 amino 4 chloro 6 methyl pyridine ( AM.)
N serve inhibits the growth of Nitrosomonas europea and N. agilis.
The seeds of neem conain lipid associates act as nitrification inhibitors and there by
increases the efficiency of urea fertilizers.
Ammonia assimilation
N2 fixation results in NH4 formation which reacts with organic acids and form amino
acids which is mediated by ammonia assimilating enzyme.
GS Glutamine synthetase
GOGAT Glutamate synthese
GDH Glutamate dehydrogenase
Genetics
Nif genes are responsible for N2 fixation.
Nif genes are 22, which are located in 7 or 8 clusters.
130
Agricultural Microbiology
CIG refers, the groups of leguminous plants that will develop effective nodules
when inoculated with the rhizobia obtained from the nodules from any member
of that legume group.
1. Recognition of the correct parameter on the part of both plant and bacterium
and attachment of the bacterium to the root hairs.
2. Excretion of nod factors by the bacterium.
3. Invasion of the root hairs by the bacterial formation of an infection thread.
4. Travel to main root via the infection thread.
5. Formation of deformed bacterial cells, bacteroids, within the plant cells and
development of the nitrogen fixing state.
6. Continued plant and bacterial division and formation of the mature root nodule.
Nodulation events
131
www.AgriMoon.Com
Bacterioids
Bacteriods are specifically referred to a swallon deformed Rhizobium cellfound in the
root nodule,capable of nitrogen fixation
The Rhizobium bacteria multiply rapidly with in the plant cells and are
transformed into swollen, misshapen and branched forms called bacteroids. When the
plant dies, the nodules can be deteriorates, releasing bacteria into the soil. The
bacterioid forms are incapable of division, but there are always a small number of
dormant rod shaped cells present in the nodule. These now proliferate; using some of
the products of the deteriorating nodule as nutrients, and the bacteria can initiate the
infection in other roots or maintain a free living existence in the soil.
Lectins
Plant proteins which specifically bind to carbohydrate receptors (polysaccharides) in
the rhizobial cell
132
Agricultural Microbiology
In the sym plasmid of Rhizobium leguminosarum bio var viciae, nod genes are located
between two clusters of genes for nitrogen fixation the nif genes. Ten nodgenes have
been identified in this species. The nod ABC genes are involved in the production of
oligosaccharides called nod factors, which induce root hair curling and trigger plant cell
division, eventually leading to formation of the nodule. In Rhizobium leguminosarum bio
var viciae, the gene nodD encodes a regulatory protein; this controls transcription of
other nod genes.
Nod D genes
Nif Genes
****** ******
133
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 19:
PHYLLOSPHERE BACTERIA
Aerial plant surfaces represent the largest biological interface on Earth and provide
essential services as sites of carbon dioxide fixation, molecular oxygen release, and
primary biomass production. Rather than existing as axenic organisms, plants are
colonized by microorganisms that affect both their health and growth.
For terrestrial plants, the phyllosphere represents the interface between the above -
ground parts of plants and the air. Conservative estimates indicate that the roughly 1
billion square kilometers of worldwide leaf surfaces host more than 1026 bacteria,
which are the most abundant colonizers of this habitat . The overall microbiota in this
ecosystem is thus sufficiently large to have an impact on the global carbon and nitrogen
cycles. Additionally, the phyllosphere inhabitants influence their hosts at the level of
the individual plants. To a large extent, interest in phyllosphere microbiology has been
driven by investigations on plant pathogens. Their spread, colonization, survival, and
pathogenicity mechanisms have been the subject of numerous studies. Much less
understood are nonpathogenic microorganisms that inhabit the phyllosphere. The
composition of the phyllosphere microbiota has been analyzed in only a few studies by
cultivation-independent methods; however, such methods are essential in light of the
yet uncultivated majority of bacteria existing in nature, or more specifically on plant
leaves. Not only their identity, but in particular the physiological properties of
phyllosphere bacteria, their adaptations to the habitat, and their potential role (e.g.,
with respect to modulating population sizes of pathogens) remain largely unknown.
Current knowledge on the traits important in the phyllosphere is derived from
relatively few studies on gene expression and stems mostly from model bacteria
cultivated on host plants under controlled conditions. However, under natural
conditions, plants and their residing microorganisms are exposed to a host of diverse,
highly variable environmental factors, including UV light, temperature, and water
availability; moreover, individual microbes are subjected to competition with other
microorganisms over resources, such as nutrients and space.
134
Agricultural Microbiology
Compared to most other bacterial habitats, there has been relatively little examination
of phyllosphere microbiology. This is somewhat surprising given the abundance of
plants in the world and the roles of various phyllosphere bacteria in the important
processes discussed below. Leaves constitute a very large microbial habitat. It is
estimated that the terrestrial leaf surface area that might be colonized by microbes is
about 6.4 x 108 km2. Given the large number of bacteria on leaves in temperate regions
of the world and that populations in tropical regions are probably even larger, the
planetary phyllosphere bacterial population may be as large as 1026 cells. Clearly, in
aggregate, these bacteria are sufficiently numerous to contribute in many processes of
importance to global processes, as well as to the behavior of the individual plants on
which they live.
The microbial communities of leaves are diverse and include many different genera of
bacteria, filamentous fungi, yeasts, algae, and, less frequently, protozoa and nematodes.
Filamentous fungi are considered transient inhabitants of leaf surfaces, being prese nt
predominantly as spores, whereas rapidly sporulating species and yeasts colonize this
habitat more actively. Bacteria are by far the most abundant inhabitants of the
phyllosphere. Epiphytic bacterial populations differ sharply in size among and within
plants of the same species, as well as in close proximity, and over short time scales as
well as over the growing season. These considerable variations in population sizes are
caused in great part by the large fluctuations in the physical and nutritional co nditions
characteristic of the phyllosphere. Additionally, plant species appear to influence the
microbial carrying capacity of the leaf, since the total number of culturable bacteria
recovered from broad-leaf plants such as cucumber and beans was significantly greater
than that recovered from grasses or waxy broad-leaf plants.
135
www.AgriMoon.Com
Studies of the composition of bacterial communities on leaves have been numerous but
rather limited in scope. It is generally believed that populations of culturable aerobic
bacteria on leaves are dominated by a few genera. A few exhaustive studies of the
variations in the microbial community of leaves over multiple time and space scales
have provided important detailed knowledge about the identity and the ecology of
bacterial leaf inhabitants. Ercolani made an extensive inventory of culturable aerobic
bacteria isolated from the surface of olive leaves over six growing seasons and reported
distinct bacterial community structures on leaves of the same age at a given time of the
growing season. Thompson et al. analyzed 1,236 bacterial strains from immature,
mature, and senescent leaves of field-grown sugar beets over a complete growing
season. They identified 78 species and 37 named and 12 unnamed genera of bacteria.
Most importantly, like Ercolani, they found distinct patterns of microbial colonization at
different times of the year, with bacterial community diversity being lowest during the
warmest and driest months of the season and highest during the cooler and rainy
months. Coincidentally, in both of the above-described studies, communities on young
leaves were composed of a greater number of taxa than those of old leaves. Thus,
specific natural environments of the phyllosphere apparently select for the presence of
specific genotypes within the leaf bacterial community. This is further supported by the
finding that the acquisition by Pseudomonas fluorescens of plasmids that are
indigenous to the leaf microflora coincided with a specific maturation stage of the plant
over two consecutive years. This indicated that traits carried on these plasmids
conferred variable selective fitness to specific plasmid-bacterial host combinations
during the growing season, possibly in response to changing conditions in the
phyllosphere habitat.
The study of bacterial colonizers of leaves has been restricted mostly to aerobic
culturable bacteria and also driven by the importance of investigating the ecology of
plant-pathogenic bacteria because of their deleterious effect on plant productivity. Thus,
the microbial ecology of the phyllosphere has been viewed mainly through the biology
of gram-negative bacteria such as Pseudomonas syringae and Erwinia (Pantoea) spp., two
of the most ubiquitous bacterial participants of phyllosphere communities. There is
reason to believe, however, that the extreme fluctuations in the physicochemical
environment of the phyllosphere over short time scales may select for bacterial species
that have unusual and versatile traits that make them fit to colonize plant surfaces but
have remained unculturable. The leaf surface has long been considered a hostile
136
Agricultural Microbiology
environment for bacterial colonists. The leaf surface is exposed to rapidly fluctuating
temperature and relative humidity, as well as repeated alternation between presence
and absence of free moisture due to rain and dew. The leaf also provides limited
nutrient resources to bacterial colonists. While other habitats probably offer more
extreme conditions of desiccation or temperature, etc., they may not be subject to such
rapid and extreme fluctuations in these several physical conditions. Several factors may
influence the microhabitat experienced by bacteria on leaves. First, the leaf itself is
surrounded by a very thin laminar layer in which moisture emitted through stomata
may be sequestered, thereby alleviating the water stress to which epiphytes are
exposed. Second, some cells in a leaf bacterial population, particularly in plant-
pathogenic populations, may not reside in exposed sites on the leaf surface but instead
may at least locally invade the interior of the leaf, avoiding the stresses on the exterior
of the leaf by residing in substomatal chambers or other interior locations. Thus, while
some phytopathogens may have the option of avoiding stresses, most other epiphytes
apparently must tolerate them in some way.
The phyllosphere has many features that make it an excellent habitat in which to study
microbial ecology. Leaves are clean, and microbes can be observed directly on leaves,
enabling the use of powerful new microscopic techniques to measure microbial identity,
activity, and gene expression. Plants can be readily grown without epiphytic microbial
communities, allowing us to readily manipulate their inhabitants, while communities
can be made as simple or complex as needed by simple inoculation. In addition,
important microbial processes, such as immigration, and ecological models, such as
island biogeography, can be readily explored in epiphytic bacterial systems. Thus,
phyllosphere microbiology has much to offer to the field of microbial ecology and
promises to contribute to more effective and less environmentally damaging means of
plant protection.
137
www.AgriMoon.Com
******
******
138
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 20:
COMPOSTING
One important aspect of the material that affects the compost process and product is the
C:N ratio of the starting material, ideally it should be 25 to 30:1. Typical C:N ratios of
different materials are shown in Table below:
Materials C:N
Activated sludge 6
Grass clippings 1215
Manure 2050
Poultry manure 15
Soil humus 10
Sawdust 200500
139
www.AgriMoon.Com
Vegetable waste 12
Wheat straw 80
Wood 400
The organisms and processes occurring during composting of straw. The length of time
varies with outside temperature and extent of mixing but usually involves 200 days
(from W. R. Horwath, personal communication).
Materials can be mixed to adjust the C:N ratio for a consistent product. There are
numerous methods used for preparing materials and the environment for the
composting process, including using waste materials alone, mixing organic materials of
different quality, adding external nutrients and/or inocula, and controlling the physical
environment to promote aerobic or anaerobic decomposition. In compost terminology,
process strategy refers to the management of the biological and chemical activity of the
composting process. The biological processing uses terminology referring to the stage of
the composting, such as active stage (mesophilic), high-rate stage (thermophilic),
controlled (cooling), and curing stage (maturing) (Fig. 17.2). Configuration refers to the
physical management of the process such as using piles, stacks, or windrows.
140
Agricultural Microbiology
decomposition and reduction in material particle size. The turned system is considered
the traditional composting method for organic material (see Diaz et al., 1993, for more
detail). With any composting system managing the composting process will
consistently produce compost with the desired characteristics.
Decomposition will continue in the thermophilic zone until substrates begin to decline,
then a gradual decrease in temperature will occur.
As the temperature declines the mesophilic organisms reappear, especially fungi that
have preference for the remaining lignin and cellulose substrates. Fungi, responsible for
30 to 40% of the decomposition the compost material, include Absidia, Mucor,
and Allescheria spp., haetomium, thermophilum, dactylomyces. The actinomycetes, such as
the Norcardia spp., Streptomyces thermofuscus, and S. thermoviolaceus are important in this
phase when humic materials are formed from decomposition and condensation
reactions. The actinomycetes are estimated to account for 15 to 30% of the
decomposition of composted material.
The compost produced from this process is lower in C than the initial material, has a
lower C:N and a higher pH, and can contain considerable NO3. The end product of
composting depends on the original substrate, any added nutrients, degree of maturity,
and composting method; typical properties of composted plant material are listed in
Table 17.4. Adding compost to soil increases the SOM, which increases soil structure
and water-holding capacity and infiltration. In addition, compost contains significant
amounts of plant nutrients such as N, P, K, and S and micronutrients, which are slowly
141
www.AgriMoon.Com
released into the soil. As an ancillary benefit compost contains fairly resistant C
compounds and may be dominated by fungi. Using compost on a garden or agricultural
soil would favor an increase in the population of fungi and thus an increase in the
fungi:bacteria ratio. Fungi are very abundant in soils and can constitute as much
biomass as roots and as a group they are also the major organic matter decomposers in
soil. Increasing the soil fungal population can increase C compounds that are agents in
binding soil particles into aggregates, which increase soil tilth. Recent studies (Bailey et
al., 2002) haveshown there is increased soil C storage in soils with greater
fungal:bacterial ratios. Thus, as a consequence of using compost on our soil we have
managed the soil microorganism population to our benefit.
%N >2
C:N <20
% Ash 1020
% Moisture 1020
% P20 151.5
Colour Brown black
Odour Earthy
% Water-holding capacity 150200
CEC (meq 100 g1) 75100
% Reducing sugars <35
Crop rotations have been practiced over the long history of agriculture. Studies dating
from the 1840s on have shown that N supplied to grain crops was the major reason for
using crop rotations containing legumes (Triplett and Mannering, 1978). With the
advent of inexpensive nitrogen fertilizers, crop rotations containing legumes declined.
Only recently has the value of crop rotations specifically including legumes been
recognized as critical in maintaining SOM and soil productivity. Researchers in Canada
studied the nutrient dynamics in a Canadian Luvisol after 50 years of cropping to a 2-
year rotation (wheatfallow) or a 5-year rotation (wheatoatsbarleyforageforage)
(McGill et al., 1986). Their results showed that the soil cropped to the 5-year rotation
contained greater amounts of organic C and N. In addition they found that microbial
turnover (i.e., carbon mineralization) was twice as fast in the 2-year rotation. The 5-year
rotation doubled the input of carbon into the soil over the 2-year system and had a
greater percentage of organic C and N in biological form. These results suggest that
longer cropping system rotations that include forage or legumes will conserve SOM,
142
Agricultural Microbiology
maintain a greater biological nutrient pool, and put more nutrients into the soil than
intensive rotations.
In a 10-year study, a low-input diverse crop system with manure and a low-input cash
grain system with legumes showed significant increases in SOM compared to a
conventional corn/soybean rotation (Wander et al., 1994). In addition, in both low-input
(multiple crop rotations) systems the microbial biomass was greater and its activity
higher than the conventional rotation of corn/soybeans with chemical inputs. The low-
input systems also mineralized significantly more N and the microbial biomass
contained 33 kg N ha_1 more N than the conventional system.
n agricultural systems, plant pathogens are an important part of the soil microbial
community. As growers reduce tillage and incorporate a greater variety of crops in
rotation they face an increasing number of plant diseases that can cause significant
stand and yield reductions. These potential losses, however, may be offset in systems
incorporating green manures by promoting disease-suppressing properties that reduce
plant pathogens, either (1) by increasing the levels of SOM that create conditions
supporting a greater microbial biomass, competition for resources, antibiosis, or
antagonism or (2) through direct inhibition by production of antibacterial/fungal
compounds as in the case of Brassica cover crops that produce isothiocyanates. Cover
crops are known to control disease-causing organisms through competition for
resources and space, control of soil micronutrient status, and alteration of root growth.
143
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 21:
ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Sewage Treatment
1. Until 1900's, human wastes were simply dumped as raw sewage into the nearest
outhouse, stream, or river. As connection of sewage to diseases such as cholera
became clear, public policy changed to required water treatment. This had major
impact on reduction of many diseases.
2. Sewage = mix of domestic + industrial waste plus drainage water from rainfall.
Contains many microbes, mostly harmless but some pathogens from humans or
animals. Can include bacteria such as Vibrio cholera, Shigella dysenteriae,
enteropathogenic strains of E. coli and B. cereus, viruses such as Hepatitis A,
many more.
3. Sewage treatment: goal is to get rid of pathogens, also reduce organic content of
effluent to a low level.
4. Primary wastewater treatment: use screens to remove large objects (plastic bags,
wads of paper, etc.), then move water to large tank to allow settling of heavier
particulate matter as sludge.
5. Secondary wastewater treatment: modern facilities use "activated sludge
process". After moving water from primary settling tank, bubble air through a
secondary tank. Aerobic microbes grow and break down organic matter in the
tank. Then move water to another tank called the secondary clarifier, where
solids settle and are added to sludge. Clarified liquid is treated with chlorine to
kill remaining microbes, then discharged as clear liquid into nearest river.
Anaerobic bacteria break down organic matter, produce lots of fermentation
products. Methanogens grow on these wastes and produce methane gas as
waste. This can be trapped and used as fuel (useful in developing countries).
144
Agricultural Microbiology
Bioremediation
Drinking water is obtained either from surface sources such as rivers, lakes or from
underground water. Such natural waters are likely to be polluted with domestic and
industrial wastes. Although water purification systems envisage protection from
pollution, sometimes, the water supply can become a potential carrier of pathogenic
organisms and endanger public health. A number of diseases such as cholera, typhoid,
viral hepatitis etc., are known to be water borne. These pathogens are commonly
transmitted through drinking water and cause infection of the intestinal tract. It is
therefore, necessary to employ treatment facilities to purify water and to provide safe
drinking water (Potable water).
Water that is free from diseases producing organism and chemical substances
deleterious to health is called potable water
The main operations employed in water purification to produce potable water are: (i)
sedimentation, (ii) filtration, and (iii) chlorination (fig 1). Sedimentation removes large
particulate matter which settles at the bottomMost microorganisms are removed during
145
www.AgriMoon.Com
coagulation with aluminium sulphate and sand filtration and subsequent treatment of
water with chlorine (0.2 2 mg free chlorine per liter) will ensure its potability.
146
Agricultural Microbiology
Microbiological Quality: Water can be perfectly clear in appearance and free from
odour and taste and yet, be contaminated by microorganisms. Pathogenic organisms
enter into water through sewage contamination or discharges from animals or humans
into the reservoirs. The coliforms (E.coli and related organisms),Streptococcus
faecalis and Clostridium perfringens which are normal inhabitants of the large intestine of
animals and humans enter water supplies through faecal contamination. The presence
of any of these bacterial species in water is evidence of sewage or faecal pollution.
Techniques are available by which the presence of these specific groups can be easily
identified. The routine bacteriological examination contains consists of (i) Plate count to
determine the number of bacteria present, and (ii) biochemical test to reveal the
presence of coliform bacteria since these are indicator organisms for fecal
contamination. Figure 2 shows a general laboratory testing scheme for detection of
cliform group of bacteria in water.
A variety of other bacteria and organisms which may not be serious pathogens
including faecal streptococci, slime forming bacteria, Sulphur bacteria, algae etc. may
also cause problems of odour, color and taste and it is essential that be eliminated from
the drinking water.
147
www.AgriMoon.Com
Presumptive test
148
Agricultural Microbiology
149
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 22:
MICROBIOLOGY OF FOOD: MICROBIAL SPOILAGE
Type of
Food product Common spoilage organisms
microorganism
Fruits and Erwinia, Pseudomonas, Corynebacteria (mainly vegetable
Bacteria
vegetables pathogens; will rarely spoil fruit)
Aspergillus, Botrytis, Geotrichum, Rhizopus, Penicillium,
Fungi
Cladosporium, Alternaria, Phytophora, various yeasts
Fresh meat,
Acinetobacter, Aeromonas, Pseudomonas, Micrococcus,
poultry, and Bacteria
Achromobacter, Flavobacterium, Proteus, Salmonella
seafood
Cladosporium, Mucor, Rhizopus, Penicillium, Geotrichum,
Fungi
Sporotrichum, Candida, Torula, Rhodotorula
Streptococcus, Leuconostoc, Lactococcus, Lactobacillus,
Milk Bacteria
Pseudomonas, Proteus
High sugar foods Bacteria Clostridium, Bacillus, Flavobacterium
Fungi Saccharomyces, Torula, Penicillium
150
Agricultural Microbiology
2. Presence of enzymes: Enzymes are organic catalysts found in all plants and animals.
Enzymes help in ripening of fruits and vegetables. If a ripe fruit is kept for few days, it
will become soft, develop black spots and will start smelling bad. This is due to
continued action of enzymes.
3. Insects, worms and rats: Small insects and worms eat the food grains. They make
small holes in the grain and at times convert the grain to a fine powder. The food grain
thus become unfit for human consumption.
151
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 23:
PRINCIPLES OF PRESERVATION
3. Removal of insects, worms and rats: By storing foods in dry, air tight containers the
insects, worms or rats are prevented from destroying it.
Control
Control of microorganisms
Heat
Cold
Drying
Acids
Sugar and salt
Oxygen concentration
Smoke
Radiation
Chemicals (preservatives)
152
Agricultural Microbiology
Control of enzymes
Heat
Oxygen removal
Acids
Chemicals (antioxidants)
Protective packaging
Sanitation
Preservation methods:
1. Thermal processing
Application of heat
Inactivate enzymes
Kill microorganisms. Most bacteria are killed in the range 82-93c. Spores are not
destroyed even by boiling water at 100c for 30 min.
o Blanching
o Pasteurization
o Sterilization
o Boiling
o Steam under pressure
a. Refrigeration
b. Freezing
153
www.AgriMoon.Com
Freezing
Physical removal of water from food (dehydration)
Removal of some of the water from food (concentration)
Addition of substances that bind water in food, making it unavailable (sugar,
salts)
4. Radiation
Ionizing radiation
Inactivate microorganisms in food
Destroy storage pests
Inactivate enzymes
Infrared radiation
Ultraviolet radiation
5. Atmosphere composition
Removal of oxygen
Inhibits o2-dependant enzymatic and chemical reactions
Inhibits growth of aerobic microorganisms
Paraffin wax
Nitrogen backflushed bags (potato chips)
Controlled atmosphere storage
Vacuum packaging of fresh food (cured meats)
154
Agricultural Microbiology
6. Fermentation
8. Smoke
Salt binds with water molecules and thus acts as a dehydrating agent in foods.
Impair the conditions under which pathogens cannot survive.
Curing is used with certain fruits and vegetables. ( sauerkraut, pickles),
155
www.AgriMoon.Com
opened, they ferment and spoil within a short period, particularly in a tropical climate.
To avoid this, it is necessary to use chemical preservatives. Chemically preserved
squashes and crushes can be kept for a fairly long time even after opening the seal of
the bottle. It is however, essential that the use of chemicals is properly controlled, as
their indiscriminate use is likely to be harmful. The preservative used should not be
injurious to health and should be non-irritant. It should be easy to detect and estimate.
Two important chemical preservatives are permitted to beverages according to the FPO
(1955).
1. Sulphur dioxide and
2. Benzoic acid
SULPHUR DIOXIDE
It is widely used throughout the world in the preservation of juice, pulp, nectar, squash,
crush, cordial and other products. It has good preserving action against bacteria and
moulds and inhibits enzymes, etc. In addition, it acts as an antioxidant and bleaching
agent. These properties help in the retention of ascorbic acid, carotene and other
oxidizable compounds. It also retards the development of nonenzymatic browning or
discolouration of the product. It is generally used in the form of its salts such as
sulphite, bisulphate and metabisulphite.
Potassium metabisulphite (K2O 2So2 (or) K2S2O5) is commonly used as a stable source
of So2. Being a solid, it is easier to use than liquid (or) gaseous So2.It is fairly stable in
neutral (or) alkaline media but decomposed by weak acids like carbonic, citric, tartaric
acid and malic acids. When added to fruit juice (or) squash it reacts with the acid in the
juice forming the potassium salt and So2, which is liberated and forms sulphurous acid
with the water of the juice. The reactions involved are as follows
SO2 has a better preservative action than sodium benzoate against bacteria and
moulds. It also retards the development of yeasts in juice, but cannot arrest their
multiplication, once their number has reached a high value.
It is well known that fruit juices with high acidity do not undergo fermentation readily.
The preservative action of the fruit acid its due to is hydrogen ion concentration. The
pH for the growth of moulds ranges from 1.5 to 8.5, that of yeasts from 2.5-8.0, and of
bacteria from 4.0 to 7.5.As fruit beverage like citrus squashes and cordials have
generally a pH of 2.5 to 3.5, the growth of moulds and yeasts in them cannot be
prevented by acidity alone. Bacteria, however, cannot grow. The pH is therefore, of
great importance in the preservation of food product and by regulating it, one or more
kinds of microorganisms in the beverage can be eliminated.
156
Agricultural Microbiology
The toxicity of So2 increases at high temperature. Hence its effectiveness depends
on the acidity, pH, temperature and substances present in fruit juice.
According to FPO, the maximum amount of So2 allowed in fruit juice is 700 ppm, in
squash, crush and cordial 350 ppm and in RTS and nectar 100 ppm. The advantages of
using So2 are a) It has a better preserving action than sodium benzoate against bacterial
fermentation b) it helps to retain the colour of the beverage for a longer time than
sodium benzoate ( c) being a gas, it helps in preserving the surface layer of juices also
(d) being highly soluble in juices and squashes, it ensures better mixing and hence their
preservation and (e) any excess of So2 present can be removed either by heating the
juice to about 71oC or by passing air through it or by subjecting the juice to vacuum.
This causes some loss of the flavouring materials due to volatilization, which can be
compensated by adding flavours.
It cannot be used in the case of some naturally coloured juices like those of
jamun, pomegranate, strawberry, coloured grapes, plum etc. on account of its
bleaching action.
It cannot also be used for juices which are to be packed in tin containers because
it not only corrodes the tin causing pinholes, but also forms H2S which has a
disagreeable smell and reacts with the iron of the tin container to form a black
compound, both of which are highly undesirable and
So2 gives a slight taste and colour to freshly prepared beverages but these are not
serious defects if the beverage is diluted before drinking.
157
www.AgriMoon.Com
e.g. Bacillus subtilis cannot survive in benzoic acid solution in the presence of CO2.
Benzoic acid is more effective against yeasts than against moulds. It does not stop lactic
acid and acetic acid fermentation.
The quantity of benzoic acid required depends on the nature of the product to be
preserved, particularly its acidity. In case of juices having a pH of 3.5-4.0, which is the
range of a majority of fruit juices, addition of 0.06 to 0.10% of sodium benzoate has been
found to be sufficient. In case of less acid juices such as grape juice atleast 0.3% is
necessary. The action of benzoic acid is reduced considerably at pH 5.0. Sodium
benzoate is excess of 0.1% may produce a disagreeable burning taste. According to FPO
its permitted level in RTS and nectar is 100 ppm and in squash, crush and cordial 600
ppm.
In the long run benzoic acid may darken the product. It is, therefore, mostly used in
coloured products of tomato, jamun, pomegranate, plum, watermelon, strawberry,
coloured grapes etc.
Radappertization
Is equivalent to radiation sterilization or "commercial sterility," as it is understood in the
canning industry. Typical levels of irradiation are 3(MK) kGy.
Radicidation
Is equivalent to pasteurization of milk, for example. Specifically, it refers to the
reduction of the number of viable specific nonspore-
forming pathogens, other than viruses, so that none is detectable by any standard
method. Typical levels to achieve this process are 2.5-10 kGy.
Radurization
May be considered equivalent to pasteurization. It refers to the enhancement of the
keeping quality of a food by causing substantial reduction in the numbers of viable
specific spoilage microbes by radiation. Common dose levels are 0.75-2.5 kGy for fresh
meats, poultry, seafood, fruits, vegetables, and cereal grains.
158
Agricultural Microbiology
Radappertization
Radappertization of any foods may be achieved by application of the proper dose of
radiation under the proper conditions.
159
www.AgriMoon.Com
present in canned foods that cannot grow in the product by reason of undesirable pH,
oxidation-reduction potential (Eh), or temperature of storage.
The Qi0 for most biological systems is 1.5-2.5, so that for each 100C rise in temperature
within the suitable range, there is a twofold increase in the rate of reaction. For every
100C decrease in temperature, the reverse is true.
The term psychrophile was coined by Schmidt- Nielsen in 1902 for microorganisms that
grow at O0C.30 This term is now applied to organisms that grow over the range of
subzero to 200C, with an optimum range of 10-150C.44 Around 1960,
the term psychrotroph (psychros, cold, and trephein, to nourish or to develop) was
suggested for organisms able to grow at 5C or below.1147 It is now widely accepted
among food microbiologists that a psychrotroph is an organism that can grow at
temperatures between 00C and 7C and produce visible colonies (or turbidity) within 7-
10 days. Because some psychrotrophs can grow at temperatures at least as high as 430C,
they are, in fact, mesophiles. By these definitions, psychrophiles would be expected to
occur only on products from oceanic waters or from extremely cold climes. The
organisms that cause the spoilage of meats, poultry, and vegetables in the 0-50C range
would be expected to be
psychrotrophs.
Methods of freezing
There are various methods of freezing
1. Sharp Freezing (Slow freezing)
This technique, first used in 1861, involves freezing by circulation of air, either naturally
or with the aid of fans. The temperature may vary from 15 to 29oC and freezing may
take from 3 to 72 hours. The ice crystals formed one large and rupture the cells. The
thawed tissue cannot regain its original water content. The first products to be sharp
frozen were meat and butter. Now-a-days freezer rooms are maintained at 23 to 29oC
or even lower, in contrast to the earlier temperature of 18oC.
160
Agricultural Microbiology
2. Quick freezing
In this process the food attains the temperature of maximum ice crystal formation (0 to
4oC) in 30 min or less. Such a speed results in formation of very small ice crystals and
hence minimum disturbance of cell structure. Most foods are quick frozen by one of the
following three methods:
a) By direct immersion
Since liquids are good heat conductors food can be frozen rapidly by direct imme rsion
in a liquid such as brine or sugar solution at low temperature. Berries in sugar solution
packed fruit juices and concentrates are frozen in this manner. The refrigeration
medium must be edible and capable of remaining unfrozen at 18oC and slightly
below. Direct immersion equipments such as ottenson Brine freezer, Zarotschenzeff
Fog freezer, T.V.A. freezer, Bartlett freezer etc. of commercial importance earlier are
not used today.
Advantages
There is perfect contact between the refrigerating medium and the product,
hence the rate of heat transfer is very high.
Fruits are frozen with a coating of syrup which preserves the colour and flavour
during storage.
The frozen product is not a solid block because each piece is separate.
Disadvantages
c) By air blast
In this method, refrigerated air at 18 to 34oC is blown across the material to be frozen.
161
www.AgriMoon.Com
The advantages claimed for quick freezing over slow freezing (sharp freezing) are (1)
smaller (size) ice crystals are formed, hence there is less mechanical destruction of intact
cells of the food (2) period for ice formation is shorter, therefore, there is less time for
diffusion of soluble material and for separation of ice (3) more rapid preservation of
microbial growth and (4) more rapid slowing down of enzyme action.
3) Cryogenic freezing
Although most foods retain their quality when quick frozen by the above
methods, a few require ultrafast freezing. Such materials are subjected to cryogenic
freezing which is defined as freezing at very low temperature (below 60oC). The
refrigerant used at present in cryogenic freeing are liquid nitrogen and liquid CO2. In
the former case, freezing may be achieved by immersion in the liquid, spraying of
liquid or circulation of its vapour over the product to be frozen.
4. Dehydro-freezing
This is a process where freezing is proceded by partial dehydration. In case of
some fruits and vegetables about 50% of the moisture is removed by dehydration prior
to freezing. This has been found to improve the quality of the food. Dehydration does
not cause deterioration and dehydro frozen foods are relatively more stable.
5. Freeze drying
In this process food is first frozen at 18oC on trays in the lower chamber of a freeze
drier and the frozen material dried (initially at 30oC for 24 hrs and then at 20oC). Under
high vacuum (0.1 mm Hg) in the upper chamber. Direct sublimation of the ice takes
place without passing through the intermediate liquid stage. The product is highly
hygroscopic, excellent in taste and flavour and can be reconstituted readily. Mango
pulp, orange juice concentrate, passion fruit juice and guava pulp are dehyderated by
this method.
****** ******
162
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 24:
ROLE OF BACTERIA IN FERMENTATION
What is Fermentation?
Fermented foods often have numerous advantages over the raw materials from which
they are made. As applied to soyfoods, fermentation not only makes the end product
more digestible, it can also create improved (in many cases meatlike) flavor and texture,
appearance and aroma, synthesize vitamins, destroy or mask undesirable or beany
flavors, reduce or eliminate carbohydrates believed to cause flatulence, decrease the
required cooking time, and increase storage life. Most fermentations are activated by
either molds, yeasts, or bacteria, working singularly or together. The great majority of
these microorganisms come from a relatively small number of genera; roughly eight
genera of molds, five of yeasts, and six of bacteria. An even smaller number are used to
make fermented soyfoods: the molds areAspergillus , Rhizopus , Mucor , Actinomucor ,
and Neurospora species; the yeasts are Saccharomyces species; and the bacteria
are Bacillus and Pediococcusspecies plus any or all of the species used to make fermented
milk products. Molds and yeasts belong to the fungus kingdom, the study of which is
called mycology. Fungi are as distinct from true plants as they are from animals. The
study of all microorganisms is called microbiology. While microorganisms are the most
intimate friends of the food industry, they are also its ceaseless adversaries. They have
long been used to make foods and beverages, yet they can also cause them to spoil.
When used wisely and creatively, however, microorganisms are an unexploitable
working class, whose very nature is to labor tirelessly day and night, never striking or
complaining, ceaselessly providing human beings with new foods. Like human beings,
163
www.AgriMoon.Com
but unlike plants, microorganisms cannot make carbohydrates from carbon dioxide,
water, and sunlight. They need a substrate to feed and grow on. The fermented foods
they make are created incidentally as they live and grow.
Human beings are known to have made fermented foods since Neolithic times. The
earliest types were beer, wine, and leavened bread (made primarily by yeasts) and
cheeses (made by bacteria and molds). These were soon followed by East Asian
fermented foods, yogurt and other fermented milk products, pickles, sauerkraut,
vinegar (soured wine), butter, and a host of traditional alcoholic beverages. More
recently molds have been used in industrial fermentation to make vitamins B-2
(riboflavin) and B-12, textured protein products (from Fusarium and Rhizopus in Europe)
antibiotics (such as penicillin), citric acid, and gluconic acid. Bacteria are now used to
make the amino acids lysine and glutamic acid. Single-celled protein foods such as
nutritional yeast and microalgae (spirulina, chlorella) are also made in modern
industrial fermentations.
For early societies, the transformation of basic food materials into fermented foods was
a mystery and a miracle, for they had no idea what caused the usually sudden,
dramatic, and welcomed transformation. Some societies attributed this to divine
intervention; the Egyptians praised Osiris for the brewing of beer and the Greeks
established Bacchus as the god of wine. Likewise, at many early Japanese miso and
shoyu breweries, a small shrine occupied a central place and was bowed to daily. In
ancient times fermentation joined smoking, drying, and freezing as basic and widely
practiced food preservation techniques. Wang and Hesseltine (1979) note that "Probably
the first fermentation were discovered accidentally when salt was incorporated with the
food material, and the salt selected certain harmless microorganisms that fermented the
product to give a nutritious and acceptable food." The process was taken a step further
by the early Chinese who first inoculated with the basic foods with molds, which
created enzymes; in salt-fermented soyfoods such as miso, soy sauce, soy nuggets, and
fermented tofu, these aided salt-tolerant yeasts and bacteria??.
The origins of microbiology (other than the general knowledge of fermented foods
which existed worldwide since ancient times) can be traced back to the invention of the
compound microscope in the late 1500s. This relatively simple tool soon revolutionized
man's knowledge of the heretofore invisible microbial world. In 1675 the Dutch
merchant Anton van Leeuwenhoek, the greatest of the early microscopists, saw and
reported one-celled organisms, which he called "animacules." (Today they are called
"protozoa.") The discovery electrified the scientific world of the time. Then in 1680,
using a microscope that magnified the diameter of each object 300-fold, he looked at
yeast and found them to consist of tiny spheroids. While the protozoa were clearly
alive, the yeast did not appear to be. No connection was drawn between the existence of
164
Agricultural Microbiology
these tiny organisms and the well known phenomenon of fermentation. So for 150 years
after van Leeuwenhoek's pioneering observations, it was hardly thought that these
minute organisms could be important enough to deserve serious study.
The early 1800s saw a great increase of interest in microbiology in Europe. The scientific
period began with great advances in botany, increased interest in microscopy, and
willingness to investigate individual organisms. The two major problems that would
challenge the greatest researchers in the new field of microbiology concerned the basic
nature of the fermentation process and the basic nature of enzymes. The scientific
breakthroughs that would lead to the unraveling of the mysteries of fermentation
starting in the 1830s were made primarily by French and German chemists. In the late
1700s Lavoisier showed that in the process of transforming sugar to alcohol and carbon
dioxide (as in wine), the weight of the former that was consumed in the process equaled
the weight of the latter produced. The first solid evidence of the living nature of yeast
appeared between 1837 and 1838 when three publications appeared by C. Cagniard de
la Tour, T. Swann, and F. Kuetzing, each of whom independently concluded as a result
of microscopic investigations that yeast was a living organism that reproduced by
budding. The word "yeast," it should be noted, traces its origins back to the Sanskrit
word meaning "boiling." It was perhaps because wine, beer, and bread were each basic
foods in Europe, that most of the early studies on fermentation were done on yeasts,
with which they were made.
The view that fermentation was a process initiated by living organisms soon aroused
fierce criticism from the finest chemists of the day, especially Justus von Liebig, J.J.
Berzelius, and Friedrich Woehler. This view seemed to give new life to the waning
mystical philosophy of vitalism, which they had worked so hard to defeat. Proponents
of vitalism held that the functions of living organisms were due to a vital principal
distinct from physico-chemical forces, that the processes of life were not explicable by
the laws of physics and chemistry alone, and that life was in some part self determining.
As we shall soon see, the vitalists played a key role in debate on the nature of
fermentation. A long battle ensued, and while it was gradually recognized that yeast
was a living organism, its exact function in fermentations remained a matter of
controversy. The chemists still maintained that fermentation was due to catalytic action
or molecular vibrations.
The debate was finally brought to an end by the great French chemist Louis Pasteur
(1822-1895) who, during the 1850s and 1860s, in a series of classic investigations, proved
conclusively that fermentation was initiated by living organisms. In 1857 Pasteur
showed that lactic acid fermentation is caused by living organisms. In 1860 he
demonstrated that bacteria cause souring in milk, a process formerly thought to be
merely a chemical change, and his work in identifying the role of microorganisms in
food spoilage led to the process of pasteurization. In 1877, working to improve the
French brewing industry, Pasteur published his famous paper on fermentation, Etudes
165
www.AgriMoon.Com
sur la Biere , which was translated into English in 1879 as Studies on Fermentation . He
defined fermentation (incorrectly) as "Life without air," but correctly showed specific
types of microorganisms cause specific types of fermentations and specific end
products. In 1877 the era of modern medical bacteriology began when Koch (a German
physician; 1843-1910) and Pasteur showed that the anthrax bacillus caused the
infectious disease anthrax. This epic discovery led in 1880 to Pasteur's general germ
theory of infectious disease, which postulated for the first time that each such disease
was caused by a specific microorganism. Koch also made the very significant discovery
of a method for isolating microorganisms in pure culture.
Interestingly, until his death in 1873, the eminent German chemist J. von Liebig
continued to attack Pasteur's work on fermentation, putrefaction, and infectious
diseases. He recognized the similarity of these phenomena but refused to believe that
living organisms were the main causative agents. Fermentation, he felt, was primarily a
chemical rather than a biological process. History has shown, with the discovery of
enzymes, that Pasteur was not entirely right, nor Liebig entirely wrong.
The work of Pasteur and his many colleagues and predecessors opened up vast new
vistas in the fields of biochemistry, microbiology, and fermentation. The term
"biochemistry" was first used in English in 1869, but this new science of the application
of chemistry to biology was generally called "physiological chemistry" until the early
1900s. The two outstanding pioneers were Liebig and Pasteur. The term "microbiology"
was first used in English in 1885, long after Pasteur's major discoveries. But basic
knowledge of this new science of the study of minute living organisms closely related to
human activity or welfare did not begin to enter the popular consciousness until the
early 1900s. At about this time the scientific breakthroughs of the 1870s and 1880s had
begun to produce a change in people's conception of the world around them so
sweeping and profound as to be termed revolutionary. Food microbiology was finally
set on a scientific foundation, based on the action of specific microorganisms. A rational
theory of infectious diseases (which formerly were not differentiated from one another)
set people's minds free from the age-old fear of vengeance from an unknowable and
invisible disease-causing entity. And the ancient theory of spontaneous generation of
lower life forms, which said they could arise de novo and fully formed from
decomposing matter, was replaced by the verifiable theory of biogenesis. For the first
time people began to accept the fact that they shared their environment with multitudes
of minute organisms that exerted an ongoing powerful influence on human life. This
new world view, among other things, provided a tremendous stimulus for new
research on fermented foods.
Although showing that fermentation was generally the result of the action of living
microorganisms was an epic breakthrough, it did not explain the basic nature of the
fermentation process, or prove that it was caused by the microorganisms that were
apparently always present. As early as the late 1700s it had been recognized that there
was another type of chemical change that resembled the yeast fermentation in some
166
Agricultural Microbiology
respects. This was the sort of changes that occur, for example, in the digestion of food.
In 1752 Reamur, in studying the digestive processes of a falcon, showed that its
digestive juices were able to dissolve meat. In 1785 William Irvine discovered that
aqueous extracts of sprouted barley caused liquefaction of starch. The first clear
recognition of what were later called "enzymes" came in 1833 when two French
chemists, A. Payen and J.F. Persoz, made a more detailed investigation of the process of
solubilizing starch with a malt extract to form a sugar that they called "maltose." They
called the agent responsible for this transformation "diastase" and they showed that it
was destroyed or inactivated by boiling, that without undergoing permanent change
itself, a small amount of diastase could convert a large amount of starch to sugar, and
that it could be concentrated and purified by precipitation with alcohol. In 1835 the
German naturalist Swann, mentioned above for his early work with fermentation,
isolated a substance from gastric juice which could bring about the dissolution of meat
but which was not an acid. He called it "pepsin" from a Greek word meaning
"digestion." It soon became fashionable to call organic catalysts such as diastase and
pepsin "ferments," because digestion and fermentation, both allied with life, seemed to
be somewhat similar processes. Under the influence of the vitalists, ferments were
grouped into two types: those involved with life process were called "organized
ferments" and those which were not (like pepsin) were merely "unorganized ferments."
A relation between the two types of ferments was suspected by many, and in 1858 M.
Traube put forward the theory that all fermentations were due to ferments, definite
chemical substances he regarded as related to the proteins and produced in the cells by
the organism. In 1876, to reduce confusion that existed concerning the two types of
ferments, the German physiologist Wilhelm Kuehne suggested that an unorganized
ferment, acting in the absence of life, be called an "enzym," after the Greek words
meaning "in yeast;' in 1881 this term was anglicized to "enzyme" by William Roberts,
and it had begun to catch on by the 1890s.
167
www.AgriMoon.Com
bacteriology all shared a deep interest in the nature and working of enzymes. Yet still
by the early 1900s no one knew exactly what enzymes were or how they acted. As the
agricultural microbiologist Conn asked in 1901, "How can they produce chemical
actions without being acted upon or entering into the reactions? Are enzymes fully
lifeless or semi-living? We still do not know the fundamental mystery of fermentation."
Gradually an understanding of enzymes and catalysts developed. In 1905 Harden and
Young discovered coenzymes, agents necessary for the action of enzymes. In 1926 the
American biochemist J.B. Sumner first purified and crystallized an enzyme (urease) and
showed that it was a protein, more precisely a protein catalyst. Eventually enzymes
came to be seen as the key catalysts in all the life processes, each highly specialized in
its catalytic action and generally responsible for only one small step in complex, multi -
step biochemical reactions. Enzymes are still produced only by living organisms, both
animals and plants; they have never? been synthesized.
The main use of molds has been in the process of making koji (mold-fermented grains
and/or soybeans), which serves as a source of more than 50 enzymes in a subsequent
fermentation in much the same way that, in the West, the enzymes of malt (steeped and
sprouted barley or other cereal grains) are used to make alcoholic beverages.
Since ancient times the koji making process has been unique to East Asia, where it has
been used in the preparation of fermented foods such as miso, soy sauce, soy nuggets,
sake, shochu (spirits), and rice vinegar ( yonezu ). The only traditional East Asian
fermented soyfood not prepared with molds is Japan's natto, and its relatives thua-
nao in Thailand and kinema in Nepal; these are bacterial fermentations. Some have
suggested that molds are widely used since they grow well in areas having a humid
climate and long rainy season during the warm months. In the West mold fermented
foods are limited primarily to a number of cheeses characterized by their strong flavors
and aromas: Camembert, Blue, Brie, and related types. Because of the widespread use of
168
Agricultural Microbiology
mold-fermented foods in East Asia, the word "mold" there has a rather positive
connotation, something like "yeast" in the West. Most Westerners still have a deep-
seated prejudice against moldy products, and they generally associate the word "mold"
with food spoilage, as in "moldy bread."
Surprisingly little has been published in English about the history of fermentation and
knowledge of the fermentation process in East Asia, especially the history prior to the
1870s and 1880s, when the new science of microbiology was introduced from the West.
The few works that do exist will be cited later.
The earliest records of the koji-making process can be traced back to at least 300 BC in
China and to the third century AD in Japan. Molds differ in one important respect from
yeasts and bacteria in that they can be easily observed with the naked eye (without a
microscope) and their growth, form, and color noted. In East Asia it was probably
understood that fermentation was a life process long before it was in the West. By the
sixth century AD, as recorded in the Ch'i-min yao-shu (the earliest encyclopedia of
agriculture), the Chinese had distinct names for two types of molds used in fermented
soyfoods; what we now call Aspergillus was then called "yellow robe" and Rhizopus was
called "white robe." These cultures were carefully distinguished and propagated from
year to year. By the 10th century a koji starter or inoculum was deliberately being used
in the preparation of koji for fermented foods (Tamiya 1958; Sakaguchi 1972; 1979).
From these early times until the 1870s the traditional fermented foods industries in East
Asia apparently advanced largely by an empirical, trial-and-error process without the
benefit of general scientific research into the nature of microorganisms and of the
fermentation process, and without any general theories in these areas.
Prior to 1870, makers of East Asian fermented foods were unaware of the basic nature
of the fermentation process of microorganisms, enzymes, and their respective
interactions. Makers of koji had no idea what caused the grains and/or soybeans to
become covered with a fragrant white mycelium after several days of incubation in a
warm koji room, or what later transformed the koji almost magically into delicious,
savory seasonings such as miso, shoyu, or soy nuggets, or into heady beverages such as
sake.
The advances in food fermentations resulting from the exchange of people and ideas
was most pronounced in Japan. The first generation of European scientists there
plunged in to their investigations of the many fermented foods with great curiosity and
enthusiasm. One of their first subjects of research was the koji mold, now known
as Aspergillus oryzae, and the various foods in which it was used, especially sake and
shoyu, which were major sources of tax revenue for the Meiji government. Tradition
ascribed the introduction of sake brewing in Japan to some emigrants from Korea at
about the end of the third century AD; they doubtless learned the process from China,
where it had long been practiced. One of the earliest accounts of sake production by a
169
www.AgriMoon.Com
Westerner appeared in 1874 when Dr. J.J. Hoffmann, a German professor in the medical
school of today's Tokyo University, published a translation of an article on sake from a
Japanese encyclopedia of 1714. In 1884 Ferdinand J. Cohn, a Polish botanist and
microbiologist, first gave the koji mold its present name, Aspergillus oryzae . After 1884
the koji mold was referred to as Aspergillus oryzae(Ahlburg) Cohn, in recognition of
Ahlburg's earliest accurate description.
Another pioneer in the field of koji research was Atkinson, who had a BS degree from
London and was a professor of analytical and applied chemistry at Tokyo University. In
1878, after visiting sake factories, he wrote "On Sake Brewing," which contained a
preliminary description of the koji-making process and mentioned the word "koji." In
1881, after extensive research with his assistant Mr. Nakazawa at the koji plant of Mr. J.
Kameyama in Yushima near Tokyo, he published two major articles. In his 73-page "On
the Chemistry of Sake Brewing," he gave a detailed account of koji making in
underground caves in Tokyo and an analysis of its composition.
Another early leader in the fields of microbiology and fermented soyfoods was K. Saito.
He did excellent early investigations on the shoyu fermentation, named the primary
tempeh mold ( Rhizopus oligosporus ) in 1905, and was an authority on yeasts and molds.
Likewise K.N. Yabe did important early work in bacteriology and in natto fermentation.
Two other early pioneers in the introduction of microbiology and fermentation science
to Japan were Dr. Teizo Takahashi (1875-1952) and his student Dr. Kinichiro Sakaguchi
(1897-), both of whom were professors in the Department of Agricultural Chemistry of
Tokyo University. Both men did numerous important studies relating to miso, shoyu,
and the koji mold, Aspergillus.
During the 20th century, Japanese microbiologists have made many important
contributions to the development of applied and industrial microbiology, including the
manufacture of fermented soyfoods, as well summarized by Tamiya (1958) and
Sakaguchi (1972). Until quite recently, their strength was more in the area of application
of scientific knowledge than in pioneering basic scientific and microbiological
breakthroughs. From the early 1900s, important studies on the koji mold and its
enzymes were done by Japanese scientists. Important advances in enzymology, with
much of the work done on koji molds, began in the 1920s. In 1928 Miyazaki developed
the combined Amylo-Koji process. By the 1950s Japanese scientists had isolated various
protease and amylase enzymes, induced mutations, and used them commercially. They
also developed the technology for the microbial production of L-glutamic acid and
monosodium glutamate ( MSG), lysine and other amino acids, flavor enhancing
nucleotides such as inosinic acid, and organic acids. They used the koji mold Aspergillus
oryzae in the commercial production of enzymes including proteases, amylases,
amyloglucosidase, and lipase. They made microbial rennet and numerous other
products. Indeed in the period following World War II, Japan became the world leader
170
Agricultural Microbiology
in the field of industrial fermentations. Wang and Hesseltine (1979) have suggested that
this may have been "in large part due to the food fermentation base from which it
launched its industrialization of micoorganisms."
171
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 25:
BENEFICIAL MICROORGANISMS IN AGRICULTURE
Microbes are an integral part of soil and contribute to soil and plant health.
Microorganisms have the ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen, solubilize and mobilize
phosphorus, produce antibiotics and disease suppressing molecules. Owing to these
properties, they are used in agriculture as biofertilizers and biopesticides. They are also
important in the treatment of solid waste and sewage. They clean up the environment
by degradation of several pollutants like pesticides, hydrocarbons, dyes and paints.
They also help in the enhanced recovery of oil and metals from low grade ores or
aqueous streams.
Man is a host to variety of pathogenic bacteria, protozoa and viruses. They can cause
various infectious and non-infectious diseases. In order to control the disease and its
transmission, it is essential to isolate and identify the causal agent from blood, sputum,
urine, stool or pus. Various cultural and molecular methods can be employed for
identification of pathogen. Sterilization techniques, use of disinfectants and vaccination
can help control transmission of disease.
Biofertilizers
Biofetilizers are the products containing living cells of different types of
microorganisms that enrich the nutrient quality of soil. The main sources of
biofertilizers are bacteria, fungi and cyanobacteria (blue green algae). Most biofertilizers
belong to one of the following categories: nitrogen fixing, phosphate solubilizing and
mobilizing, and plant growth promoting rhizobacteria. Some of the major biofertilizers
and target crops are given in table 8.1. Nitrogen fixing biofertilizers fix atmospheric
nitrogen into forms which are readily useable by plants. These
include Rhizobium, Azospirillum, Azotobacter, blue green algae and Azolla.
WhileRhizobium requires symbiotic association with the root nodules of legumes to fix
nitrogen, others can fix nitrogen independently. Phosphate solubilizing microorganisms
secrete organic acids that enhance the uptake of phosphorus by plants by dissolving
rock phosphate and tricalcium phosphate. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are the most
common phosphorus mobilising types that are omnipresent. A group of bacteria that
enhance the growth of plant through nitrogen fixation, phosphorus solubilization or
production of plant growth promoting metabolites are known as Plant Growth
Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR). Many PGPR strains have a potential to be used as
microbial inoculants to enhance crop productivity.
172
Agricultural Microbiology
The growth in agricultural production in the last three decades has been accompanied
by a sharp increase in the use of chemical fertilizers, causing serious concern. Foremost
among these concerns is the effect of excessive fertilizers on the quality of soil and
ground water. The use of environmental friendly biofertilizers can cut down the use of
chemical fertilizers. Biofertilizers have definite advantage over chemical fertilizers. It is
economical to use biofertilizers as they are a cheap source of nutrients when compared
to chemical fertilizers. Biofertilisers in addition to nitrogen and phosphorus, also
provides certain growth promoting substances like hormones, vitamins, and amino
acids that improves the plant health and vigour. Continuous use of chemical fertilisers
adversely affects the soil structure whereas biofertilizers when applied to soil improve
the soil structure. The chemical fertilizers are toxic at higher doses where as
biofertilizers have no toxic effects.
173
www.AgriMoon.Com
1. Symbiotic microorganism
2. Asymbiotic or free living
3. Associative Symbiosis
Examples of nitrogen fixing microorganisms for each category are given in table
Some examples of nitrogen fixing bacteria belonging to different categories.
Examples
Category
Symbiotic Rhizobium- legume symbiosis
Rhizobium-Parasponia (non-legume) symbiosis
Frankia- Trees (e.g Alder, Casuarina)
Azolla- Anabaena
Azotobacter paspali - Paspalum notatum
Free living
1. Aerobic Azotobacter
Beijerinckia
Cyanobacteria (e.g Nostoc, Anabaena, Tolypothrix,
Aulosira)
2. Facultative Klebsiella pneumoniae
Bacillus polymyxa
3. Anaerobic Clostridium
Desulfovibrio
Rhodospirillum
Rhodopseudomonas
Desulfotomaculum
Desulfovibrio
Chromatium
Chlorobium
Associative Azospirillum
Herbaspirillum
Acetobacter diazotrophicus
Azoarcus
The list of nitogen fixing bacteria is long but here we will discuss some of the important
types of biofertilisers that can be considered for agrobased industries.
RHIZOBIUM INOCULANT
174
Agricultural Microbiology
The taxonomy of root and stem nodulating bacteria is in a state of transition. The initial
classification of these organisms based on plant infection into 7 cross inoculation groups
has been abandoned after extensive criticism. A new system of classification was
proposed by Jordan (1984) in Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology (Table ). He
separated the root nodule bacteria into two genera, Rhizobium and Bradyrhizobium,
based on data on numerical taxonomy, molecular characteristics and rate of growth on
laboratory media. Fast growing strains were placed under genus Rhizobium whereas
slow growing strains were placed inBradyrhizobium. Since 1984, the classification has
undergone lot of changes. Three additional
genera, Mesorhizobium, Sinorhizobium and Azorhizobium have been recognised and many
new species have been reported so far.
Rhizobium inoculation
Legume inoculation is a significant strategy for the manipulation of rhizobial microflora
and improving crop productivity and soil fertility. However, in tropical soils where
there is presence of adequate native rhizobia and high levels of mineral N, legume
175
www.AgriMoon.Com
1. Propagation
176
Agricultural Microbiology
medium in the vessel should be maintained at 1:20 (5% inoculum rate). The broth is
continuously aerated by forcing sterile air through porous stainless steel sparger.
Various fermentation requirements like aeration, agitation and fermentation time vary
from strain to strain. Table gives the optimum fermentation conditions for mass
multiplication of rhizobial strains.
When the number of rhizobia in the broth has attained the required standard (108-109
cells ml-1) the broth should be added to the carrier for preparation of carrier-based
inoculant.
Optimum fermentation conditions for mass multiplication of Rhizobium strains
In India, different carrier materials like peat, liginite, charcoal, rice husk, pressmud,
vermiculite, soil and coir dust has been employed. Although peat is the favoured base
for inoculants world over, in India high quality peat is not available. A mixture of
177
www.AgriMoon.Com
charcoal and soil in ratio of 3:1 is most commonly used as a carrier material. The
preparation of charcoal based carrier is given below.
The carrier material is sun dried up to a moisture level of 5%. The material is
ground to a desired fineness preferably to pass 100-200 mesh sieves.
PO4 @ 0.5% and soil @ 25% are mixed thoroughly with it. Finally the carrier is
mixed with 10% water before sterilization.The carriers are mixed with finely
powdered calcium carbonate to neutralize if they are acidic. To make charcoal
more suitable for the multiplication of rhizobia, CaCO3 @ 1%, KH
The pretreated carrier is sterilized in an autoclave at 15 lb psi for 3-4 hr
continuously.
Broth culture of Rhizobium containing 109 cells mL-1 is added to one-third of the
water holding capacity of the carrier.
Curing
178
Agricultural Microbiology
for Rhizobium inoculants in 1977 (IS: 8268-1976). This was revised in 1986 (ISI 1986).
These specifications are given in Table.
Parameters Specifications
1. Base Carrier based
2. Cell number at the time 108 g-1 carrier
of manufacture
3. Cell number at the time 107 g-1 carrier within 15 days before expiry date
of expiry
4. Expiry period 6 months from the date of manufacture
5. Permissible No contamination at 108 dilution
contamination
6. pH 6.0- 7.0
7. Strain Should be checked serologically
8. Carrier Should pass through 150-212 micron, IS (72-100 mesh).
Application of inoculants
The major goal of legume inoculation is to introduce efficient and competitive strains in
large numbers that can survive and establish in the legume rhizosphere and colonize
the roots promptly. Application of inoculant to the seed surface prior to sowing is the
traditional, most commonly used and most user-friendly means of inoculation. There
are numerous adhesives like gur, sugar, gum arabic and methyl cellulose suitable for
attaching inoculant to the seeds.
179
www.AgriMoon.Com
Average increase in yield of some of the pulse crops due to Rhizobium inoculatio n is
presented in table 8.5.
Crop % increase
Arhar 32
Mungbean 33
Chickpea 41
Groundnut 49
Lentil 50
Soybean 61
Azotobacter is an aerobic, Gram negative, rod shaped bacteria occurs singly, in chains, or
in clumps. It does not form endospores but do form thick-walled cysts. These cysts are
resistant to desiccation and to some deleterious chemical and physic agents. They,
however, cannot withstand extreme temperatures. While in the cyst stage of their life
cycle, they do not fix nitrogen and are optically refractile. It may be motile by
peritrichous flagella or non-mobile. It can produce a water soluble pigment, either
yellow-green, fluorescent or red-violet/ brownish-black. It grows well at an optimum
180
Agricultural Microbiology
temperature range between 20 and 30C and at pH 7.0 - 7.5. They are able to grow on
various carbohydrates, alcohols, and organic acids.
Azotobacter was first discovered using a culture that was devoid of a combined nitrogen
source. Azotobacter is found on neutral to alkaline soils, in aquatic environments, in the
plant rhizosphere and phyllosphere. A.chroococcum is the most common species of
Azotobacter present in the soil.
Azotobacter sp. are known to influence plant growth through their ability to fix
molecular nitrogen; production of growth promoting substances like IAA, gibberellin or
gibberellin-like compounds and vitamins, excretion of ammonia in the rhizosphere in
the presence of root exudates; production of anti-fungal metabolites and phosphate
solubilization.
181
www.AgriMoon.Com
Azospirillum
Beijerinck in 1925 reported a nitrogen-fixing bacterium under the name Spirillum
lipoferum. The ability to fix nitrogen by certain spirilla was first recorded by him, who
noticed their presence in enrichment cultures of Azotobacter chroococcum. A new
orientation to the study of this bacterium has come with the observations of Dobereiner
and Day (1976) that Azospirillum could be isolated from the roots of tropical
grass Digitaria decumbens using a semi-solid N2-free sodium malate enrichment
medium. Surface sterilization of roots by 70% alcohol and creation of micro-aerophilic
(low oxygen requirements) conditions in the medium are the two essential steps for the
isolation of the organism. Azospirillum is recognized as a very ubiquitous soil organism
capable of colonizing effectively not only the roots of a wide variety of plants but also
their above ground portions forming apparently an associative symbiosis.
The bacterium is Gram-negatiave, motile, generally vibroid in shape and contains poly-
b-hydroxy-butyrate granules. It is very motile and possess a long, polar flagellum for
swimming and occasionally, peritrichous flagella for swarming on surfaces. The cells
change shape and size with culture age, and produce cysts. They can grow under
anaerobic (NO3- as acceptor of electrons, denitrification), microaerophilic (N2 or NH3
as nitrogen sources) and fully aerobic conditions with combined nitrogen only (NH3,
NO3-, amino acids). Azospirillum species grow well on organic acids such as malate,
succinate, lactate and pyruvate. On Rojo-Congo red medium, Azospirillum forms
distinct scarlet red, dry and wrinkled colonies .
182
Agricultural Microbiology
Taxonomy
Azospirillum belongs to group 1 of the alpha subclass of the Proteobacteria . At
present there are five known species of Azospirillum- A. brasilense, A. lipoferum,A.
amazonense, A. halopraeferens and A. irakense. The distinguishing morphological and
biochemical characteristics of the five species is given in table .
Different morphological and biochemical characteristics of five known species
of Azospirillum
________________________________________________________________________
Characteristics A.lipoferumA.brasilense A.amazonenseA.irakense A.halopraeferens
________________________________________________________________________
Colony type
On CR medium Scarlet Scarlet Pink Scarlet Pink
On PDA medium Pink Pink White White No
growth
Raised Raised Raised Flat
Raised
Biotin requirement. + - - - +
Utilization of C
Malate + + + + +
D-Glucose + - - - +
Glycerol + + - - +
Sucrose - - + + -
________________________________________________________________________
Inoculant production
For mass multiplication of Azospirillum, the organism is allowed to grow in flasks
containing NH4Cl and malate medium and incubated at 35o - 37o C for 3 days. When
there is good growth, the broth culture is mixed with the carrier, and the carrier-based
183
www.AgriMoon.Com
Once inoculated onto plant roots, Azospirillum cells induce remarkable changes in the
morphology and behaviour of the entire root system. For instance, hairs close to the
root tip take on a more distinctive appearance, and the overall density and the length of
the root system increases (Fig ). Root hairs consist of expanded root epidermal cells,
which play a role in water and nutrient exchanges and also help to anchor root to its
surroundings. Inoculating azospirilla onto plant roots also increases the diameter and
length of both lateral and adventitious roots and typically leads to additional branching
of the lateral roots. These developments in the root system are important because they
increase absorptive area and volume of the soil substrate available to the plant.
Strains of Azospirillum are known to produce siderophores. They are low molecular
weight iron binding compounds synthesized in large amounts and excreted into culture
medium by microorganisms under iron-deficient conditions. Siderophores form
complexes with the metal ions in the culture medium followed by translocation of the
complex through bacterial envelope. The ability of Azospirillum to synthesize
184
Agricultural Microbiology
siderophores may contribute to improve the iron nutrition of plants and offer protection
from minor pathogens.
The ability of azospirilla to form antibiotic substances varies from strain to strain.
Fungistatic activity of azospirilla against a wide range of phyto-pathogenic fungi has
been reported e.g. certain azospirilla offer protection to cotton plants
against Thielaviopsis basicola and Fusarium oxysporum.
Acetobacter diazotrophicus
Acetobacter diazotrophicus, is a gram-negative, microaerobic, nitrogen fixing
microorganism and was isolated from washed roots and stems of sugarcane, using
semi-solid N-free sugar medium acidified with acetic acid to pH 4.5. Cells of Acetobacter
diazotrophicus C. Although sucrose is the best C-source forare straight rods with
rounded ends, about 0.7 to 0.9 by 2 um, motile by lateral or peritrichous flagella.
Optimum growth temperature is around 30 Acetobacter diazotrophicus but sugars like
glucose, fructose, galactose, mannitol are also utilized. It grows well in the pH range of
3.8 to 5.8 with good nitrogenase activity. Growth and nitrogen fixation occur at sugar
concentration ranging from 10 to 30 %.
185
www.AgriMoon.Com
Cyanobacteria have ability to carry out both photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation.
Besides contributing to the nitrogen economy of the soils these algae have other
beneficial effects. Their exceptionally good water holding capacity, their ability to
concentrate nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, fixed carbon and trace elements,
their soil binding capacity and their ability to scavenge sodium from salt affected soils
are additional ecological advantages. The presence of BGA in the immediate vicinity of
rice seeds can decrease sulphide and iron injury to the plants. Cyanobacteria also
produce number of plant growth substances like amino acids, small proteins and
peptides, sugars, complex polysaccharides, vitamins and growth hormones. Standing
crops of nitrogen fixing BGA range from 5-20 tons per hectare fresh weight and
186
Agricultural Microbiology
contribute approximately 30kg nitrogen per season per hectare of rice field. A bulk of
the organic matter produced by algal growth remains in the soil and becomes available
to the next crop as organic enrichment.
Azolla-Anabaena symbiosis
Azolla is a small aquatic fern and is omnipresent in nature. Each leaf consists of
two lobes, a thick aerial dorsal lobe and a thin ventral lobe occasionally of a slightly
larger size. The dorsal lobe is green and has a blue green algal symbiont (Anabaena
azollae) within a central cavity. The heterocyst of the symbiontAnabaena is the site of
nitrogen fixation. Azolla provides nutrients and a protective leaf cavity for Anabaena,
which in turn provided nitrogen for the fern.
Azolla is found on still water in ponds, lakes, swamps, ditches and paddy fields of
temperate and tropical regions. Because of its rapid growth, high N content and ability
to grow in still water, it has been exploited as a fertilizer for rice. This is used in
Vietnam and China for centuries, however, its use as a biofertilizer in India is relatively
187
www.AgriMoon.Com
The high N2 fixing ability, rapid growth, high biomass accumulation and N-content
determines the potential of Azolla as a biofertilizer for rice. Biological nitrogen fixation
through Azolla - Anabaena complex is considered a potential biological system for
increasing rice yield at comparatively low cost. The ability of Azolla to fix N2 is about
1.1 kg N/ha/day. The doubling time varies between 2 and 10 days for most species
and maximum biomass ranged between 0.8 to 5.2 t dry matter/ha with an average of
2.1 t/ha.
If Azolla multiplication is good even without addition of P, then there is no need to add
it.
188
Agricultural Microbiology
189
www.AgriMoon.Com
The efficient cultures have shown capacity to solubilize insoluble inorganic phosphate
such as rock phosphate, tri-calcium phosphate, iron and aluminium phosphates by
production of organic acids. They can also mineralize organic phosphatic compounds
present in organic manure and soils. Inoculation of PSM to seeds or seedlings increases
the grain yield of crops. They are known to add 30-35 kg P2O5 ha-1.
The inorganic phosphate solubilization by microbes can be attributed to
acidification, chelation, and exchange reaction in growth medium as well as to the
proton transfer during ammonium assimilation.
190
Agricultural Microbiology
Endomycorrhizae are formed by nearly 90% of the land plants. In this association the
fungi form external hyphal networks in the soil and grow extensively within the cells of
the root cortex. This network of fungal hyphae within the root cortex is known as hartig
net. Fungi belonging to basidiomycetes, ascomycetes or zygomycetes are involved
depending on the type of endomycorrhizal association. Specific types of
endomycorrhizae are formed by members of the Ericaceae (Ericoid mycorrhizae)and
orchidaceae (orchidaceous mycorrhizae), but the type of mycorrhizae which is
widespread is the arbuscular mycorrhizae (earlier referred as vesicular-arbuscular
mycorrhizae). It is formed by 120 species of zygomycetes, all belonging to the
order Glomales (Glomus, Acaulospora, Gigaspora, Sclerocystis, Entrophospora and
Scutellospora). None of these fungi has yet been successfully cultured axenically.
The effect of mycorrhizae in increasing plant growth has been well documented by
different workers for many plants. The beneficial effect of mycorrhizae on plant growth
has mostly been attributed to an increase in the uptake of nutrients, especially
phosphorus. Mycorrhizal fungi improve the soil phosphorus availability by solubilizing
inorganic forms of phosphorus or by mineralization of organic phosphorus. External
hyphae of mycorrhiza also has the capacity to take up and deliver various other
nutrients to plants like NH4+, NO3- ,K, Ca, SO42- , Cu, Zn and Fe. In experimental
chambers, the external hyphae of AM can deliver upto 80% of plant P, 25 % of plant N,
10% of plant K, 25% of plant Zn and 60% of plant Cu. Mycorrhiza also produce
ectoenzymes which provide host plant with the potential to access organic N and P
forms that are normally unavailable to AM fungi or to non mycorrhizal roots.
191
www.AgriMoon.Com
growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) are one class of beneficial bacteria inhabiting
the soil ecosystem (Kloepper et al 1989). The effects of PGPR on plant growth can be
mediated by direct or indirect mechanisms (Glick 1995). The direct effects have been
most commonly attributed to the production of plant hormones such as auxins,
gibberellins and cytokinins, or by supplying biologically fixed nitrogen or solubilizing
insoluble P. These PGPR also affect growth by indirect mechanisms such as supperssion
of bacterial, fungal and nematode pathogens by the production of siderophores, HCN,
ammonia, antibiotics, volatile metabolites etc., by induced systemic resistance and/or
by competing with the pathogen for nutrients or for colonization space.
The nitrogen fixing and phosphate solubilising bacteria have been discussed separately.
Other PGPR include bacteria belonging to the genera Arthrobacter, Bacillus,
Burkholderia, Enterobacter Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, Xanthomonas, Serratia and many more
yet to be identified. Effects of PGPR on plant growth have been evaluated by many
workers on different crops. Increase in plant height and root and shoot biomass of
wheat was reported following inoculation with 12 different isolates of PGPR belonging
to Pseudomonas aeruginosa, P. cepacia, P. fluorescens and P. putida. Similarly treatment of
wheat seeds with fluorescent pseudomonads (antagonistic to Gaeumannomyces
graminis) resulted in yield increases of 27% in field trials. PGPR are potent inoculants
but are not commercialised due to lack of consistency under field conditions. Recent
work suggests that combination of PGPR strains (two or more) which have diverge
mode of plant growth promotion or antagonism against soil-borne pathogens are more
effective than single strain inoculum. IAA producing Bacillus isolates promoted root
growth and (or) nodulation when coinoculated with Rhizobium etli on Phaseolus vulgaris.
Similarly coinoculation of soybean with B. japonicum and Serratia liquefaciens 2-68 or S.
proteamaculans 1-102 increased soybean grain and protein yield compared to the non
treated controls. Better biocontrol of take all disease of wheat was observed when
fluorescent Pseudomonas was applied in combination with Trichoderma koningii. Seed
treatment containing combinations of Escherichia coli S17R1 andBurkholderia cepacia BC-B
provided significantly greater suppression of cucumber seedling pathogenesis in a field
soil naturally infested with Pythium and Fusariumspp. than seeds treated with strain BC-
B, S17R1 or Enterobacter cloacae 501 R3. Experiments performed at chernobyl showed
that coinoculation of duet of nitrogen fixing Klebsiella oxytoca VN13 and Xanthomonas
maltophila VN12 could protect maize from radionuclides penetration; as well improve
the yield and percentage of protein in seed.
192
Agricultural Microbiology
Many bacterial genera have shown their potential for biocontrol both under in
vivo and in vitro conditions. Agrobacterium, Arthrobacter, Alcaligenes, Bacillus,Escherichia
coli, Enterobacter, Pseudomonas, Burkholderia, Rhizobium and Serratia were found to be
potent for suppression of soil-borne fungal pathogens. Many of these biocontrol agents
exhibited their effectiveness under field conditions also.
****** ******
193
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 26:
MICROBIAL AGENTS FOR CONTROL OF PLANT DISEASES
The intensive use of pesticides in agriculture is a cause of serious concern. The problem
is especially serious because of the development of resistance to pesticides in important
pests and the presence of pesticide residue in agricultural and dairy products. In India,
the most serious problem of resistance is witnessed in cotton, for which American
bollworm is a serious pest. The bollworm has developed resistance to almost all
pesticides in a number of regions and is serious problem in many states. Other
important pests of cotton, white fly and jassid, have also developed pesticide resistance
in some places. Growing pesticide resistance has meant that a large proportion of
agricultural production is lost to pests. Pesticide resistance has mainly been caused by
excessive and indiscriminate use of pesticides. Pesticides of spurious quality, which are
commonly sold in small towns and villages, have also contributed to resistance in many
areas.
Excessive use of chemical pesticides in agriculture is a serious cause of concern. It is,
therefore, important that alternative, environmental friendly methods of plant
protection are adopted such as integrated pest management (IPM) techniques,
including the use of biopesticides.
Biopesticides are an important group of pesticides that can reduce pesticide risks. They
are derived from animals, plants and microorganisms such as bacteria and viruses. The
advantages of biopesticides are:
Bacterial
Bacteria belonging to genus Bacillus are potent against many insect pests. They suppress
pests by producing a toxin specific to the pest; causing a disease; preventing
establishment of other microorganisms through competition; or other modes of action.
194
Agricultural Microbiology
195
www.AgriMoon.Com
pyrethroids, and the toxin breaks down quickly when exposed to ultraviolet
light/sunlight.
Besides Bacillus thuringiensis, other bacteria like Bacillus popilliae and B. sphaericus are
also important for their biocontrol activity. B. popilliae is a Gram-negative spore-forming
rod, 1.3 to 5.2 x 0.5 to 0.8 micrometres. It is a fastidious organism that grows only on
rich media containing yeast extract, casein hydrolysate or an equivalent amino acid
source, and sugars. Trehalose, the sugar found in insect haemolymph, is a favoured
carbon source though glucose also can be used. Some varieties of B. popilliae form a
crystalline body inside the cell at the time of sporulation and in this respect resemble B.
thuringiensis. But the crystal is not thought to play a significant role in infection and
certainly it is not as important as in B. thuringiensis. The variety lentimorbus, for
example, does not produce a crystal and yet it causes disease. Another difference
between B. popilliae and B. thuringiensis is that B. popilliae cannot be induced to sporulate
in laboratory media although it does so readily in the diseased host. Actually there are a
number of oligosporogenic mutants - ones that produce a few spores - but spores for
microbial control programmes are usually produced in living insect larvae - an
expensive and time-consuming process. Its spectrum of control includes larvae of
Japanese beetles, chafers, some May and June beetles. Spores of B. popilliae persist for
long periods in the soil and are ingested by grubs in the soil, and multiply in the
hemocoel. The infected larvae do not molt to the next instar, remain active until just
prior to death when they become sluggish and moribund.
Fungal
Beauveria is a naturally occurring fungus in soils throughout the world, and has been
researched for control of soil borne insects. Many soil insects, however, may have a
natural tolerance to this pathogen, which is not exhibited in many foliar pests.
Therefore, commercial development of this fungus for biological control has primarily
been targeted against foliar feeding pests.
Beauveria bassiana causes a disease known as the white muscadine disease in
insects. Beauveria belongs to fungal subdivision: Deuteromycotina and order:
Hyphomycetes. It has a simple life cycle with no known sexual stage; the asexual spores
are called conidia. Many strains of Beauveria bassiana are used as biopesticides. It is
active against adults and larvae of many kinds of insects; eggs of lepidopteran pests
196
Agricultural Microbiology
such as moths. The spectrum also includes mole cricket, chiggers, white grubs, fire ants,
ants, flea beetle, boll weevil, whiteflies, plant bug, grasshoppers, thrips, aphids, mites
and many others.
When spores of this fungus come in contact with the cuticle (skin) of susceptible insects,
they germinate and grow directly through the cuticle to the inner body of their host.
The fungus proliferates throughout the insect's body, producing toxins and draining the
insect of nutrients, eventually killing it. Therefore, unlike bacterial and viral pathogens
of insects, Beauveria and other fungal pathogens infect the insect with contact and do not
need to be consumed by their host to cause infection. Once the fungus has killed it's
host, it grows back out through the softer portions of the cuticle, covering the insect
with a layer of white mold (hence the name white muscadine disease). This downy
mold produces millions of new infective spores that are released to the environment.
The majority of baculoviruses used as biological control agents are in the genus
Nucleopolyhedrovirus. These viruses are excellent candidates for species-specific,
narrow spectrum insecticidal applications (Table 8.8). They have been shown to have no
negative impacts on plants, mammals, birds, fish, or even on non-target insects.
On the other hand, the high specificity of baculoviruses is also cited as a weakness for
agricultural uses, since growers may want one product to use against a variety of pests.
Currently, researchers are attempting to use genetic engineering techniques to expand
virus host ranges to the desired pest species. Releases of such genetically-engineered
baculoviruses have been made by researchers in the U.K. and the United States and
show promise, although the cost of commercial production of these agents must be
reduced if they are to be competitive.
Viruses are unable to reproduce without a host - they are obligate parasites.
Baculoviruses are no exception. The cells of the host's body are taken over by the
genetic message carried within each virion, and forced to produce more virus particles
until the cell, and ultimately the insect, dies. Most baculoviruses cause the host insect to
die in a way that will maximize the chance that other insects will come in contact with
the virus and become infected in turn. Infection by baculovirus begins when an insect
eats virus particles on a plant - perhaps from a sprayed treatment. The infected insect
197
www.AgriMoon.Com
dies and "melts" or falls apart on foliage, releasing more virus. This additional infective
material can infect more insects, continuing the cycle.
198
Agricultural Microbiology
Biocontrol
Biocontrol or Biological control can be defined as the use of natural enemies to control
pests. Natural enemies of pests are categorized as parasites, predators and pathogens. It
is a broad term that also includes use of biopesticides.
About 30% of the yield in agriculture is lost because of the combined effects of biotic
and abiotic stresses, with pathogenic fungi alone responsible for a reduction of about
12%. Control of fungal pathogens is based on the use of agronomic practices and
199
www.AgriMoon.Com
While diverse microbes may contribute to the biological control of plant pathogens,
most research and development efforts have focused on isolates of three
genera,Bacillus, Trichoderma, and Pseudomonas.
The most studied fungal biocontrol agents are Trichoderma spp. and some isolates,
effective as biofungicides in certain culture conditions, have been recently introduced in
commercial agriculture. Concurrently, fundamental discoveries concerning the
mechanism of action of these fungi have been made. Studies on the mechanism of
biocontrol had indicated that Trichoderma and other mycoparasites have developed a
vast array of molecular tools to support their parasitic behaviour. It is believed
that Trichoderma produces different types of lytic enzymes that act on the cell wall of
fungi and kill them. Genes encoding for cell wall degrading enzymes (CWDES) such as
chitinolytic, glucanolytic and proteolytic enzymes have been isolated and used to
improve biocontrol capabilities of Trichoderma strains.
Two species of Trichoderma, T. harzianum and T. viride are commonly used as biocontrol
agent. Their spectrum of control includes fungal pathogens
like Armillaria, Pythium, Rhizoctonia, Verticillium, Sclerotium and Botrytis.
****** ******
200
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 27:
BIOGAS PRODUCTION
BIOGAS (Methane)
Biogas is mixture of methane (50-60 per cent), CO2 (30 40 per cent), hydrogen
(5-10 per cent), H2S and nitrogen (traces), produced from anaerobic digestion of animal,
plant wastes or any cellulose containing waste material. The digester used for biogas
production is called a Biogas plant. A typical biogas plant using cowdung as a raw
material consists of: (a) digester and (b) gas holder. The digesters are either of (a) batch
type which are filled once, sealed and emptied when the raw materials stop producing
gas or (b) continuous type which are fed with a definite quantity of waste at regular
intervals so that gas production is continuous and regular. The nature of fermentation
in the digester is anaerobic
Methane production
Involves three process viz., hydrolysis, acidification and methonization
201
www.AgriMoon.Com
Methanogenic phase
It is a strict anaerobic phase and during this phase organic Carbon is converted
to microbial mass, CO2 and methane.
These bacteria are sensitive to pH and optimum is 6.8- 7.2. Drop in pH leads to
inhibition of methanogenesis
Methanobacterium, Methanomicrobium, Methanococcus, Methanosarcina
202
Agricultural Microbiology
Alcohol production
Production of ethyl alcohol from sugary materials is one of the oldest known
microbiological processes. Alcohol is an important solvent and raw material used in a
variety of chemical industries. Although today industrial alcohol is also produced
synthetically from ethylene, production of alcohol by fermentation of cheap sugary
materials such as molasses by yeast is still an important industry.
For ethyl alcohol production, selected strains of Saccharomyces cerevisae are employed
since all the strains are not equally efficient. The alcohol tolerance and sugar tolerance
are important criteria used in the selection of yeast strains. Strains tolerant to high sugar
and alcohol concentration are desired. The raw material generally used is either crude
cane molasses or best molasses which contain about 50 per cent fermentable sugars. The
203
www.AgriMoon.Com
In recent years because of the possibility of using ethyl alcohol as a fuel supplement and
a chemical feed stock, there is increased interest in increasing production but at a
cheaper and economical rate. For this, a variety of improvements in the traditional
batch fermentation have been described in literature. Among these, the one that has
attracted attention is the cell recycle technique which does not involve much additional
expenditure. Basically, the technique involves the reuse of cell mass that is produced
during the fermentation. It has been found that by doing so, about 5-10 per cent of the
substrate which would have been otherwise used for cell growth is saved in addition to
a great saving in the cost of inoculum and time. By using recycling technology,
fermentation time has been drastically reduced from 24- 36 hours in a batch
fermentation to as low as 5-6 hours.
204
Agricultural Microbiology
Whisky is traditionally produced from the fermentation of grain mash, rum from
molasses, brandy from grape wines and vodka from potatoes. The flavour and aroma
are introduced into the purified alcohol during the blending process. Sometimes, these
alcoholic beverages are allowed to age for long periods in wooden casks before they are
consumed.
****** ******
205
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 28:
BIODEGRADABLE PLASTICS
Introduction
Although plastics as we know them today are a relatively recent invention, they
have become an important part of modern life.
206
Agricultural Microbiology
But bioplastics have to possess adequate physical properties. Their properties have to
be managed and controlled with technological means through the development of
adequate formulations and plastics processing. The commercial ventures already under
way in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan indicate that there is confidence
technological advances are possible. The key to solving technical problems often simply
knows what the problems are.
Bioplastics also have to be cost-competitive. Commercially available biopolymers are
typically more expensive than synthetic polymers, often significantly so. Currently only
starch competes with synthetic polymers in terms of cost.
Interest in the development of bioplastics will grow largely to the extent that there is
real interest in and concern over the environment. Societal concern over the
environment is already being reflected in governmental restrictive legislation on the use
of plastics, particularly aimed at plastic packaging. Legislation has begun at the local,
state, federal, and international levels, and legislation will undoubtedly increase in the
future. New legislation will likely contain restrictions aimed at materials that are neither
recyclable nor biodegradable. Labeling legislation may lead to an "ecolabel," based on a
product's raw material usage, energy consumption, emissions from manufacture and
use, and waste disposal impact. Most of all, what is needed is a paradigm shift.
Making it a reality
Ignoring nature's way of building strong materials, we have, for many
applications, over-engineered our plastics for stability, with little consideration of their
recyclability or ultimate fate, and ended up transforming irreplaceable resources into
mountains of waste.
There is another way. We can take nature's building materials and use them for our
purposes, without taking them out of nature's cycles. We can be borrowers, not
consumers, so that the process can continue indefinitely. If society is indeed, becoming
more and more committed to resource conservation, environmental preservation and
sustainable technologies, bioplastics will find their place in this Age of Plastics.
The widespread use of these new plastics will depend on developing technologies that
can be successful in the marketplace. That in turn will partly depend on how strongly
society is committed to the concepts of resource conservation, environmental
preservation, and sustainable technologies. There are growing signs that people indeed
want to live in greater harmony with nature and leave future generations a healthy
planet. If so, bioplastics will find a place in the current Age of Plastics.
Plastics
Plastics are a class of material that has one or more polymers as its primary
ingredient, that is shaped by flow when it is processed (usually using heat), and that is
solid in its final form. Plastics can be made up of many different kinds of polymer, and
can be processed in many different ways, but as long as they satisfy these three
conditions, they are bona fide plastics.
207
www.AgriMoon.Com
The general "recipe" for any kind of plastic is a combination of three ingredients:
a polymer, one or more plasticizers, and one or more additives. These ingredients can
then be processed into different shapes, resulting in a wide variety of different materials
with different properties.
Polymers
Polymers are long molecules. They are one of the basic components of all
plastics.
Synthetic polymers
Synthetic polymers are polymers that are man-made. Most synthetic polymers
are manufactured from petroleum.
Some examples of synthetic polymers include:
These materials are generally not biodegradable, and because they are made from
petroleum, once the basic materials for creating them are used up, we cannot make any
more.
Biopolymers
Biopolymers are polymers that occur in nature. Carbohydrates and proteins, for
example, are biopolymers. Many biopolymers are already being produced
commercially on large scales, although they usually are not used for the production of
plastics. Even if only a small percentage of the biopolymers already being produced
were used in the production of plastics, it would significantly decrease our dependence
on manufactured, non-renewable resources.
Some examples of biopolymers include:
208
Agricultural Microbiology
A number of other natural materials can be made into polymers that are
biodegradable. For example:
Plasticizers
A plasticizer is a substance that can be added to material to increase its
workability, flexibility, or pliability. Plasticizers are one of basic ingredients of all
plastics.
Additives
An additive is a substance that can be added to material to change its properties,
usually to make the end product more desirable in some way. Additives are one of
basic ingredients of all plastics.
The pure polymer resin by itself may not always have the physical properties needed in
the final product; it may be strong but too brittle, flexible but too elastic, or flexible and
elastic but just plain ugly. Just like the polymer material itself, additives come in
different varieties: some can be found in the environment, while others are
manufactured. The amounts and types of additives used in manufacturing plastics are
another factor that influence how environmentally-friendly they are.
Green Plastics
Green Plastics, sometimes also called Bioplastics, are plastics that are
biodegradable and are usually made mostly or entirely from renewable resources.
209
www.AgriMoon.Com
Because different compounds can satisfy some or all of these criteria to different
degrees, there are different "degrees of green" in green plastics. To evaluate how
"green" a plastic material is, you need to ask three questions:
5. How quickly can the plastic be re-integrated into the environment after it is no
longer being used?
6. How quickly are the ingredients that go into making the plastic created in the
environment?
7. How much pollution or waste is created during the process of actually making
the plastic?
1. Biodegradability
Biodegradation is a process where something breaks down into simple
compounds as a result of the action of microorganisms (like bacteria, fungi, or algae).
The term biodegradation is actually a contraction, short for "biotic degradation."
Something is biodegradable if it can be broken down by this kind of process.
In order to say that something "biodegrades", it therefore has to meet the following
requirements:
210
Agricultural Microbiology
Types of Biodegradation
Because biodegradation requires microorganism to do something to a material,
usually the material has to be broken up into smaller pieces first. As a result, most
biodegradable materials become biodegradable after the action of another kind of
degradation.
Hydro-biodegradable
Hydro-biodegradable materials are first broken down by interaction with water
(a process called hydrolysis), and then are further broken down by microorganisms.
Photo-biodegradable
Photo-biodegradable materials are first broken down by interaction with sunlight
(a process called photolysis), and then are further broken down by microorganisms.
Oxo-degradable
Some companies have been claiming that they have created an additive that can
be added to traditional plastics to make them biodegradable. These products become
what is called oxo-degradable, and sometimes is incorrectly identified as oxo-
biodegradable.
Although this allows the plastic to return to the environment, these products are not
biodegradable. Instead, the additive allows the plastic material to break down
physically when exposed to water, into pieces small enough to be accidentally ingested
by microbes. However, the microbes are not able to actually break this material down
further. The end result is therefore a material that combines biomass with polymer
residue. The plastic never decomposes as a result of interaction with the organisms.
This process is therefore more accurately called "disintergration" rather than
"biodegradation".
For bioplastics to become practical, they must have properties that allow them to
compete with the current plastics on the market: bioplastics must be able to be strong,
resiliant, flexible, elastic, and above all, durable. It is the very durability of traditional
plastics that has helped them in the marketplace, and has been a major goal of plastics
research throughout the years. However, it is exactly this durability that now has
211
www.AgriMoon.Com
people increasingly worried. Now that we wrap our sandwiches in bags that will still be
around when the sandwich, and even the person who ate it, are long gone, many people
are wondering: have we gone too far?
2. Renewability
A renewable resource is a natural resource that is created in the environment
faster than it is used up by people. Many people think of "renewability" as a fixed trait:
some things (like trees, grass, and wind) are renewable, while others (like oil and coal)
are not. In fact, whether a resource is renewable depends on both how fast it is
replenished and how fast people use it. As a result, some resources are more renewable
than others, and some resources may or may not be renewable depending on how they
are used.
Rate of Renewal
The rate of rewal (sometimes also called the "sustainable yield") of a resource tells
you how quickly it can be replenished by the environment.
Solar energy, tides, rainfall, and winds are considered perpetual resources for energy
because they renew much faster than they could ever be used. (Can you imagine us
"using up" the wind, so that we would have to wait until the earth made more?)
Living organisms provide the majority of resources that are generally considered
"renewable", because they generally renew themelves within a reasonable amount of
time relative to how quickly they are use. Agricultural feedstocks and marine
feedstocks are two major categories of living organism feedstocks. Within this category,
some organisms renew faster than others: for example, it takes much longer to grow a
new tree than it does to grow grass.
Most of the resources that are considered "non-renewable" are based on coal, oil, natural
gas, and other substances that take so long for the environment to create that almost
any use of these resources at all will cause them to be used up before any more is
created. Petro-chemical feedstocks are feedstocks derived from petroleum principally
for the manufacture of chemicals, synthetic rubber, and a variety of plastics.
Rate of Use
Imagine you live in a small village by a river. A turbine on the river spins, and it
can generate enough electricity for the entire village every day. Clearly, their
hydroelectric power is a completely renewable resource. However, as the size of the
village grows, their energy use grows. If eventually the needs of the village far outstrip
212
Agricultural Microbiology
the energy that can be provided by the turbine, then the hydroelectric energy from the
river is no longer a renewable resource for the village: the rate of use has exceeded the
rate of replenishment.
The same issue exists for the use of plants. As long as our use of (for example) corn
remains moderate compared to the amount of corn produced, corn is a renewable
resource. However, if our use of corn increases dramatically without a corresponding
increase in corn crop production, then corn will cease to be a renewable resource: we
will use it all up, and we will either have to cease production until the corn renews itself
or (worse) it will become extinct, so it will not replenish at all.
3. Processing
When making plastics, the initial mass of polymer, called resin, is processed into
different shapes using a variety of methods, including: extrusion, injection molding,
compression molding, transfer molding, and casting. Different processing techniques
result in the wide variety of forms that plastic can take: ranging from thin films and
elastic sheets, to resiliant panels and hard, solid three-dimensional shapes.
HISTORY OF BIOPLASTICS
The use of natural polymers is not entirely a new idea. In one form or another,
green plastics have been around for a long time.
Early History
Natural resins-like amber, shellac, and gutta percha-have been mentioned
throughout history, including during Roman times and the Middle Ages. Native
Americans were developing and refining techniques for making ladles and spoons from
animal horns long before there was any European contact. In Europe, molded horn
jewelry and snuff boxes were popular in the eighteenth century.
The 1800's
Significant commercialization of bioplastics only began in the middle of the
nineteenth century... The American inventor, John Wesley Hyatt, Jr., was looking for a
substitute for ivory in the manufacture of billiard balls, and in 1869 patented a cellulose
derivative for coating non-ivory billiard balls. That attempt, however, was affected by
the coating's flammability; balls were occasionally ignited when lit cigars accidentally
came into contact with them. Hyatt continued working on the project and soon
developed celluloid, the first widely used plastic, now most widely known for its use in
photographic and movie film.
The 1900's
The history of plastics changed dramatically in the early 1900s, as petroleum
emerged as a source of fuel and of chemicals. The early bioplastics were simply
213
www.AgriMoon.Com
displaced by plastics made from synthetic polymers. World War II brought on a large
increase in plastics production, a growth which continues to this day.
The 1920's
In the 1920s Henry Ford experimented with using soybeans in the manufacture of
automobiles. Ford was partly motivated by a desire to find non-food applications for
agricultural surpluses, which existed then as they do now. Soy plastics were used for an
increasing number of automobile parts, like steering wheels, interior trim, and
dashboard panels. Finally Ford gave the go-ahead to produce a complete prototype
"plastic car." Ford, a master at generating publicity, exhibited the prototype wi th great
fanfare in 1941, but by the end of the year was no longer publicizing the "plastic car,"
probably for a variety of reasons. World War II played a role: armament work took
precedent over almost everything else, and steel shortages limited all non-defense
production. Today plastic automobile parts are common, but the use of plastics made
from renewable raw materials got side-tracked.
The 1960's
One well established bioplastic that has survived the growth of the synthetic
plastics industry is cellophane, a sheet material derived from cellulose. Although
production peaked in the 1960s it is still used in packaging for candy, cigarettes, and
other articles.
****** ******
214
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 29:
PLANT MICROBE INTERACTIONS
1. Occurs only near thermal springs on ocean floor, 2 miles or more below
surface. Totally black, no sunlight penetrates below 600 feet.
215
www.AgriMoon.Com
Ruminant Symbiosis
Gnotobiotic Animals
216
Agricultural Microbiology
3. Relatively easy to produce germfree animals for birds. Sterilize shell, use sterile
incubator, keep animals in an environment where all air, food, water is sterilized
before entry.
4. More difficult to establish germfree animals other than birds. Need cesarean
section of pgrenant females, germfree isolation chambers where all air, food,
water is sterilized before entry.
5. Germfree animals generally are less healthy than animals with normal
microbiota. Defects include:
1. Greater vitamin requirements for K and B complex
2. lower cardiac output
3. much more susceptible to pathogens -- normal microbiota colonize access
sites, often compete successfully to prevent pathogens from binding to
host tissues.much smaller infectious dose required to initiate an infection
217
www.AgriMoon.Com
The micro organic that inhabits the soil exhibited many different types of associations
or interactions. Some of the associations are indifferent or neutral, some are beneficial
type of interactions and others are detrimental or negative.
a) Neutralism
It is a type of neutral association, in two microorganisms behaves entirely
independently or eg: Each could utilize different nutrients with out producing
metabolic end products that are inhibitory. This might be transitory as the condition
change in the environment, parituclary the availability of nutrients, the relationship
might change.
Symbiosis / Mutualism
Mutualism is a form of symbiosis in which both organisms benefit. An example of
mutualism is a clownfish and sea anemones. The clownfish gets protection, while the sea
anemones become clean. This is mutualism, because both water animals benefit from
having each other around
218
Agricultural Microbiology
b) Proto co-operation
One type of mutualistic association is that involving the exchange of nutrients
between two species, a phenomenon called syntrophism.
Many micro organic synthesize the vitamins and anaerobic acids in excess of their
nutritional requirements. Others have a requirement of one or more of these nutrients.
Hence certain combinations of species will grow together but not apart when nutrient
levels are very low.
Nutritional proto co-operation has been demonstrated in cultures. Eg: In a
medium deficient in nicotinic acid and biotin, neither Proteus vulgaris nor Bacillus
polymyxa will multiply as the former (B) requires nicotinic acid and the latter biotin. In
mixed culture, in the same medium however both grown since the partner bacterium
synthesizes the missing vitamins.
c) Symbiosis
The living together of two or more organisms; microbial association
Symbiotic association is evident in soil among several groups of organisms algae
and fungi in lichens, bacteria residing with in protozoa cells, bacteria and roots in the
legume symbiosis, fungi and roots in mycoorhizae.
In lichens, the algae and fungi are in such an intimate physical and physiological
relationship that the lichens they make are classified as distinct organism. The alga
benefits in part are se of the protection afforded to it by the hyphae that envelop and
protect it from environmental stresses. While, the fungi gains by making use of the CO2
fixed by its photosynthetic partner. Where BGA participants, the heterotraph benefits
from the fixed N2.
Symbiotic relationship exists between micro and macro organisms. R-L associate
N2 fixed is transferred to legume and organic which is transferred to the by CO2
metabolizing legume host.
219
www.AgriMoon.Com
d) Commensalisms
It is the type of beneficial association, in which only one species derives benefit while
the other is unaffected. This occurs commonly in soil with respect to degradation of
complex molecules like cellulose and lignin. One patter can attack a substrate not
available to the second organism, but the decomposition results in the formation of
products utilized by the second. The one which offer eg: (1) Many fungi able to degrade
cellulose and yield glucose and organic acids. This can serve as a which source for
many bacteria and fungi, which are non cellulolytic (2) The second type of commensal
association arises from the need of many micro organic for growth factors. These
compounds are synthesized by many micro organisms and their exertion permits the
proliferation of nutritionally fastidious soil inhabitants.
220
Agricultural Microbiology
This include
a) Competition
b) Amensalism
c) Parasitism and predation
a. Competition
It is the rivalry for limiting nutrients or other common needs. In such situations the best
adapted microbial species will predominate or infact, eliminate other species which are
dependent upon the same limited nutrient substances.
Eg: Competition between strains derived from soil and those applied with legume seeds
at the time of sowing. The better competitor involves the root hairs more frequently
and it is responsible for a high % of nodules.
b. Amensalism
It is a negative interaction, in which the release of products by one species is toxic to its
neighbours. Antagonism is a type of ammensalism.
. Antagonism
The killing, injury or inhibition of growth of one
species of micro organisms by another or when one
organism adversely affects the environmental of the
other is refered as antagonism.
221
www.AgriMoon.Com
organism. Antibiotics are common among Streptomyces isolates, but numerous strains
of Micromonespora and Nocardia are also active. The most common frequently
encountered (B) synthesis antibiosis are species of Bacillus strains of Pseudomonasspecies
of Peniciliu, Trichoderma, Aspgerillus, Fusarium are also excrete antibiotic substance.
Anitimicrobial compounds against (F) are present in the soil, which inhibit the
germination of fungal spores. This phenomenon is termed as fungistasis. Cyanide is
produced by certain (F) in concentrations toxic to other microorganisms, and algae
elaborate fatty acids which exhibit and marked antibacterial activity other metabolic
products that may result from microbial activity in soil, which are likely to be inhibiting
to other species are CH4, sulfides and other volatile S compounds. B. t toxin to
lepidopteran insect pestd
Myxobacteria (slime (B)) and streptomyces are antagonistic because they secrete potent
lytic enzymes which destroy other cells by digesting their cell wall. The degraded
cellular material as well as they released protoplasmic material, which serve as
nutrients.
d. Predation
Direct attack of one organism on another predation is one of the most dramatic
interrelationships among the micro organic in nature of the many microscopic
inhabitants of soil, the bacteria stand out as particularly prove to the attach of predators.
The most numerous predators on (B) are protozoans, which by feeding on the billions of
(B) undisputedly affect their populations. Protozoans are a key factor in limiting the
size of bacterial populations. Probably reducing the abundance of cells and serving to
maintain a diverse community.
Myxobacteria and cellular slime molds also affect by feeding directly on them
Bacteria of the diverse genera are attacked by bacteriophages
Bdellovibrio is ubiquitous, capable of attacking a number of bacterial genera.
222
Agricultural Microbiology
e. Parasitism
Is a form of symbiosis in which one organism benefits and the other is harmed. An
example of parasitism is wasps eggs and caterpillar. When the eggs hatch into young
wasps, these young wasps burrow into the body of the caterpillar. The young wasps
feed on the caterpillars tissues. After a month or so, the young wasps chew their way
out of the dying caterpillars body and spin cocoons. Afterwards, the young wasps
become adult wasps. This is parasitism, because the caterpillar is harmed while the
young wasps benefit from feeding on the caterpillar.
****** ******
223
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 30:
BIOREMEDIATION
Introduction
In the twentieth century, the ever increase in the global human
population and industrialization led to the exploitation of natural resources. The
increased usage of heavy metals
and its disposal in the ecosystems around the world and also in India is becoming an
important ecological issue to be take into our consideration. This has indiscriminate
release of heavy metals into the ecosystem has already posing air, water and soil
pollution causing various
uncompromising, deleterious and fatal effects on humans and the
stability of the ecosystems.
Soil and water are the most important natural resources for all living beings
including human beings for survival, which are recently becoming highly polluted. As a
result of this, several living forms which are better suited to the polluted environment
have out bursted causing ecological imbalance. Unlike soil, water body has its own
ability to maintain its natural state through process called self purification. However
when the discharge of pollutants is heavy, the process of self purification of water
bodies is adversely affected and the water remains polluted.
Unlike organic contaminants,
heavy metals are not biologically degradable, and
therefore can persist in the environment for a long
duration. The term heavy metal can be explained as 1) Relatively
abundant in the earths crust; 2) Reasonable extraction
and usage; 3) Having direct contact with people; and 4)
Toxic to humans. Heavy metals
are the metals which have a specific gravity of more than 4 or more than 5
(Anonymous, 1964; Nieboer and
Richardson, 1980). Some important
heavy metals are Zinc (Zn), Chromium
(Cr), Cadmium (Cd), Arsenic (As) etc.,
Bioremediation can be defined as any
process that
uses microorganisms, fungi, green
plantsor their enzymes to return the
natural environment altered by
contaminants to its original condition.
Bioremediation may be employed to
attack specific soil contaminants, such
as degradation of chlorinated hydrocarbons by bacteria. An example of a more general
224
Agricultural Microbiology
approach is the cleanup of oil spills by the addition of nitrate and/or sulfate
fertilisers to facilitate the decomposition of crude oil by indigenous or exogenous
bacteria.
225
www.AgriMoon.Com
BIOREMEDIATION STRATEGIES
226
Agricultural Microbiology
In situ bioremediation
These techniques are generally the most desirable options due to lower cost and less
disturbance since they provide the treatment in place avoiding excavation and transport
of contaminants. In situtreatment is limited by the depth of the soil that can be
effectively treated. In many soils effective oxygen diffusion for desirable rates of
bioremediation extend to a range of only a few centimeters to about 30 cm into the soil,
although depths of 60 cm and greater have been effectively treated in some cases. The
most important land treatments are:
Incineration Excavation
Bioventing
Is the most common in situ treatment and involves supplying air and nutrients
through wells to contaminated soil to stimulate the indigenous bacteria. Bioventing
employs low airflow rates and provides only the amount of oxygen necessary for the
biodegradation while minimizing volatilization and release of contaminants to the
atmosphere. It works for simple hydrocarbons and can be used where the
contamination is deep under the surface.
227
www.AgriMoon.Com
In situ biodegradation
Involves supplying oxygen and nutrients by circulating aqueous solutions through
contaminated soils to stimulate naturally occurring bacteria to degrade organic
contaminants. It can be used for soil and groundwater. Generally, this technique
includes conditions such as the infiltration of water-containing nutrients and oxygen or
other electron acceptors for groundwater treatment.
Biosparging:
Biosparging involves the injection of air under pressure below the water table to
increase groundwater oxygen concentrations and enhance the rate of biological
degradation of contaminants by naturally occurring bacteria. Biosparging increases the
mixing in the saturated zone and there- by increases the contact between soil and
groundwater. The ease and low cost of installing small-diam- eter air injection points
allows considerable flexibility in the design and construction of the system.
Bioaugmentation:
Bioremediation frequently involves the addition of microorganisms indigenous or
exogenous to the contaminated sites. Two factors limit the use of added microbial
cultures in a land treatment unit: 1) nonindigenous cultures rarely compete well enough
with an indigenous population to develop and sustain useful population levels and 2)
most soils with long-term exposure to biodegradable waste have indigenous
microorganisms that are effective degrades if the land treatment unit is well managed.
Ex situ bioremediation
These techniques involve the excavation or removal of contaminated soil from ground.
Landfarming
Is a simple technique in which contaminated soil is
excavated and spread over a prepared bed and
periodically tilled until pollutants are degraded. The
goal is to stimulate indigenous biodegradative
microorganisms and facilitate their aerobic
degradation of contaminants. In general, the practice
228
Agricultural Microbiology
is limited to the treatment of superficial 1035 cm of soil. Since landfarming has the
potential to reduce monitoring and maintenance costs, as well as clean-up liabilities, it
has received much attention as a disposal alternative.
Composting
Is a technique that involves combining contaminated soil with nonhazardous
organic amendants such as manure or agricultural wastes. The presence of these
organic materials supports the development of a rich microbial population and elevated
temperature characteristic of composting.
Biopile
Are a hybrid of landfarming and composting. Essentially, engineered cells are
constructed as aerated composted piles. Typically used for treatment of surface
contamination with petro- leum hydrocarbons they are a refined version of landfarming
that tend to control physical losses of the contaminants by leaching and volatilization.
Biopiles provide a favorable environment for indigenous aerobic and anaerobic
microorganisms.
Bioreactors
Slurry reactors or aqueous reactors are used for ex situ treatment of contaminated
soil and water pumped up from a contaminated plume. Bioremediation in reactors
involves the processing of contaminated solid material (soil, sediment, sludge) or water
through an engineered containment system. A slurry bioreactor may be defined as a
containment vessel and apparatus used to create a three-phase (solid, liquid, and gas)
mixing condition to increase the bioremediation rate of soil- bound and water-soluble
pollutants as a water slurry of the contaminated soil and biomass (usually indigenous
microorganisms) capable of degrading target contaminants. In general, the rate and
extent of biodegradation are greater in a bioreactor system than in situ or in solid-phase
systems because the contained environment is more manageable and hence more
controllable and predictable. Despite the advantages of reactor systems, there are some
229
www.AgriMoon.Com
Advantages of bioremediation
Bioremediation is a natural process and is therefore perceived by the public as an
acceptable waste treatment process for contaminated material such as soil. Microbes
able to degrade the contaminant increase in numbers when the contaminant is present;
when the contaminant is degraded, the biodegradative population declines. The
residues for the treatment are usually harmless products and include carbon dioxide,
water, and cell biomass.
Theoretically, bioremediation is useful for the complete destruction of a wide
variety of contaminants. Many compounds that are legally considered to be hazardous
can be transformed to harmless products. This eliminates the chance of future liability
associated with treatment and disposal of contaminated material.
Instead of transferring contaminants from one environmental medium to another,
for example, from land to water or air, the complete destruction of target pollutants is
possible.
Bioremediation can often be carried out on site, often without causing a major
disruption of nor- mal activities. This also eliminates the need to transport quantities of
waste off site and the poten- tial threats to human health and the environment that can
arise during transportation.
Bioremediation can prove less expensive than other technologies that are used for
clean-up of hazardous waste.
Disadvantages of bioremediation
Bioremediation is limited to those compounds that are biodegradable. Not all
230
Agricultural Microbiology
****** ******
231
www.AgriMoon.Com
Lecture 31:
BIOSENSOR
It consists of 3 parts:
Principles of Detection
Analytical chemistry plays an important role in food quality parameters because almost
every sector of industry and public service relies on quality control. A food quality
biosensor is a device, which can respond to some property or properties of food and
transform the response(s) into a detectable signal, often an electric signal. This signal
232
Agricultural Microbiology
may provide direct information about the quality factor(s) to be measured or may have
a known relation to the quality factor. There are various kinds of biosensors most of
which work on the principle of one of the following:
Electrochemical Biosensors
Electrochemical biosensors are based on monitoring electroactive species that are either
produced or consumed by the action of the biological components (e.g., enzymes and
cells). Transduction of the produced signal can be performed using one of several
methods under two broad headings:
Potentiometric Biosensors
Amperometric Biosensors
Potentiometric Biosensors
These are based on monitoring the potential of a system at a working electrode, with
respect to an accurate reference electrode, under conditions of essentially zero current
flow. In process, potentiometric measurements are related to the analyte activity (of a
target species) in the test sample. Potentiometric biosensors can operate over a wide
range (usually several orders of magnitude) of concentrations. The use of
potentiometric biosensors for food quality analysis has not been as widely reported as
for amperometric sensors. However, some of the examples where this approach has
been used for food quality analysis include estimating monophenolase activity in apple
juice, determining the concentration of sucrose in soft drinks, measuring isocitrate
concentrations in fruit juices, and determining urea levels in milk.
Amperometric Biosensors
The use of amperometric biosensors in signal transduction has proved to be the most
widely reported using an electrochemical approach. Both one-shot (disposable)
sensors and on-line (multi measurement) devices are commercially available,
monitoring a wide range of target analytes. In contrast to potentiometric devices, the
principle operation of amperometric biosensors is defined by a constant potential
applied between a working and a reference electrode. The applied potential results in
redox reactions, causing a net current to flow. The magnitude of this current is
proportional to the concentration of electro active species present in test solution and
both cathodic (reducing) and anodic (oxidizing) reactions can be monitored
amperometrically. Most of the amperometric biosensors described use enzymes as the
biorecognition element. Typically, oxidase and dehydrogenase enzymes have been the
most frequently exploited catalysts used for these biosensor formats.
Calorimetric Biosensors
Most of the biochemical reactions are accompanied by either heat absorption or
production. Sensors based on calorimetric transduction are designed to detect heat
generated or consumed during a biological reaction; by using sensitive heat detection
233
www.AgriMoon.Com
devices. Various biosensors for specific target analytes have been constructed. In the
field of food quality analysis, uses of such biosensors to detect metabolites have been
described.
Optical Biosensors
These sensors are based on measuring responses to illumination or to light emission.
Optical biosensors can employ a number of techniques to detect the presence of a target
analyte and are based on well-founded methods including chemiluminescence,
fluorescence, light absorbance, phosphoresence, photothermal techniques, surface
plasmon resonance (SPR), light polarization and rotation, and total internal reflectance.
For example the use of this technique has been demonstrated to detect the presence of
allergens, in particular peanuts, during food production.
Acoustic Biosensors
Piezoelectric quartz crystals can be affected by a change of mass at the crystal surface;
this phenomenon has been successfully exploited and used to develop acoustic
biosensors. For practical applications, the surface of the crystal can be modified with
recognition elements (e.g., antibodies) that can bind specifically to a target analyte.
Immunosensors
Immunosensors are based on exploiting the specific interaction of antibodies with
antigens. Typically, immunoassays (such as the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
technique) employ a label (e.g., enzyme, antibody, fluorescent marker) to detect the
immunological reaction. The use of biosensor platforms, linked to an immunoassay
format, offers a route to rapid and accurate quantitative measurements of target
analytes.
Applications of Biosensors
There are many potential applications of biosensors of various types. The main
requirements for a biosensor approach to be valuable in terms of research and
commercial applications are the identification of a target molecule, availability of a
suitable biological recognition element, and the potential for disposable portable
detection systems to be preferred to sensitive laboratory-based techniques in some
situations. Some examples are given below:
234
Agricultural Microbiology
Fruit that are incapable of enduring their ripening process once picked from the
plant like berries, cheery, citrus fruits, grapes, lychee, pineapple, pomegranate,
and tamarillo.
Fruits that can be harvested mature and ripped off the plant like apple, apricot,
avocado, banana, cherimoya, guava, kiwifruit, mango, nectarine, papaya,
passion fruit, pear, peach, persimmon, plum, quince, sapodilla, sapota.
235
www.AgriMoon.Com
Volatile compounds are responsible for the characteristic aroma of fruits and are
present in extremely small quantities (<100< g/g fresh wt.). The major volatile formed
is ethylene. Scientists are trying to develop portable instruments with sensors that
detect volatile production by fruits and hence detecting maturity and quality. Other
strategies include the removal of a very small amount of fruit tissue and measurement
of total sugar or organic acid content.
236
Agricultural Microbiology
Glucose Biosensors
Most of the glucose biosensors developed are based on immobilized glucose oxidase. In
many cases, glucose oxidase has been associated with mediators so as to bring down the
high working potential required for hydrogen peroxide breakdown. The -D glucose
sensor developed was also based on glucose oxidase, at the working potential of -350
mV vs. Ag/AgCl, hydrogen peroxide was catalytically oxidized at a rhodinised carbon
electrode (White et al, 1994). A novel and simple method which do not involve enzyme
or monomer modifications, for the coimmobilization of ferrocene and GOx in a
poly(pyrrole) matrix for use as glucose biosensor was developed (Foulds and Lowe,
1988). In spite of the low conductivity of the polypyrrole film formed, the biosensors
performance was better than that of other devices reported due to redox mediation of
ferrocene that lowers the working potential to 0.4 V. The characterization of the
polymer prepared from an ethanolic suspension demonstrated the presence of alcohol
interferes in the polymerization kinetics (Pablo et al., 2001). However, this played a
beneficial role in efficient immobilization of both, the enzyme and the ferrocene, in a
very thin electroactive film. This fact improved the biosensors time response, avoiding
mass transport effects. A new type of disposable amperometric biosensor was devised
by screen-printing thick-film electrodes directly on a porous nitrocellulose (NC) strip. A
glucose biosensor based on hydrogen peroxide detection was constructed by
immobilizing glucose oxidase (GOx) on the NC electrode strip and by formulating a
237
www.AgriMoon.Com
strong oxidation layer (i.e., PbO2) at the sample loading area, placed below the GOx
reaction band. The screen-printed PbO2 paste serves as a sample pretreatment layer
that removes interference by its strong oxidizingability. Samples applied were carried
chromatographically, via the PbO2 paste, to the GOx layer, and glucose was catalyzed
to liberate hydrogen peroxide, which was then detected at the electrode surface. The
proposed NC/ PbO2 strip sensor is shown to be virtually insusceptible to interfering
species such as acetaminophen and ascorbic and uric acids and to exhibit good
performance, in terms of the sensor to sensor reproducibility. The characterization of
metal-decorated CNTs was done using X-ray diffraction analysis, transmission electron
microscopy (TEM), high-resolution TEM, scanning electron microscopy, and energy-
dispersive X-ray analysis. Amperometric biosensor fabricated by depositing GOD over
Nafion-solubilized Au-MWNT electrode retained its biocatalytic activity and obtained
fast and sensitive glucose quantification. The fabricated GOD/Au- MWNT/Nafion
electrode has a good glucose biosensing potential, and it displayed a linear response up
to 22 mM glucose and a detection limit of 20 M method.
Sucrose Biosensor
Sucrose is an essential part of any fruit, so estimating the concentration of sucrose at
different maturity levels could help in identifying the ripening parameters of fruits.
Therefore, with regard to sucrose detection, electrodes made up of invertase,
mutarotase and glucose oxidase and mediated tri-enzyme electrode based on sucrose
phosphorylase and electrocatalytic oxidation of NADH, have been used. Because real
samples contain both glucose and sucrose, sucrose sensors have been operated in
tandem with glucose oxidase sensors. The sucrose sensor developed was based on the
invertase, mutarotase and glucose oxidase reaction scheme and the sucrose level was
calculated with respect to the net glucose sensors.
238
Agricultural Microbiology
the analyte. The second method was based on the measurement of oxygen consumed
during the enzyme-catalysed oxidation of ascorbic acid using Clark Electrode.
Phenolic Compounds
Phenolic compounds are widespread in nature, and they play a significant rol e in living
organisms. They are used in medicine and industries, including wood processing and
pesticide production. Most of the phenolic derivative compounds are highly toxic, and
their determination in low concentrations is the significant problem. Scientists are
developing various procedures for determining phenols with biosensors.
A biosensor based on crude seed hull enzyme extracts has been prepared for
monitoring phenol and hydrogen peroxide. The biosensor has confirmed very
promising results as a successful instrument to monitor both hydrogen peroxide and
phenol. It is an inexpensive biosensor that could be operated for up to 3 weeks with
rapid response and stability parameters. In conditions of response to phenol detection,
the developed SBP biosensor was found less sensitive than other previously reported
biosensors based on purified SBP or HRP or on crude extracts of sweet potato, which
have detection limits in the micromolar range for phenols. The foremost reason for this
was the low activity of the enzyme extracts. Further work on the improvement of
biosensor sensitivity and applications for the detection of chlorophenols and other
substituted phenols are in progress.
The amperometric biosensor described glucose oxidase and polyphenol oxidase carb on
paste electrodes prepared via a new strategy of carbon paste modification based on the
in situ electropolymerizaton of pyrrole monomer previously mixed within the paste.
Such alteration induced a better electrical percolation of the carbon structure and
enhanced the enzyme entrapment within the electrode material. Therefore, attractive
potentialities offered by a biocomposite electrode based on PPO for the detection of
flavonols have been demonstrated to control the phenolic levels in beer samples.
239
www.AgriMoon.Com
Benzoic Acid
An amperometric benzoic acid-sensing inhibitor biosensor was prepared by
immobilizing mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) tissue homogenate on a Clarktype oxygen
electrode. The effects of the quantity of mushroom tissue homogenate, the quantity of
gelatin and the effect of the cross-linking agent glutaraldehyde percent on the biosensor
were deliberated. The most favourable concentration of phenol used as substrate was
200 mM. The biosensor responded linearly to benzoic acid in a concentration range of
25100 mM and Standard deviation (s.d.) was found to be 0.49 M for 7 successive
determinations at a concentration of 75 M. The inhibitor biosensor based on
mushroom tissue homogenate was applied for the determination of benzoic acid in
fizzy lemonade, some fruits and groundwater samples. A good concord was shown
when the results were compared to those obtained using AOAC
method.
Fructose
A superior amperometric biosensor based on a solid binding matrix (SBM) composite
transducer has been used for the determination of d-fructose in various food samples.
The enzyme, d-fructose dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.99.11), was incorporated directly into a
solid composite transducer containing both 2-hexadecanone as SBM and chemically
modified graphite. The current variation caused by the presence of d-fructose was
calculated amperometrically using Hexacyanoferrate (iii) as a redox mediator. The
amperometric signals generated were fast, reproducible and linearly proportional to d -
fructose concentrations in the range 5010-6 1010-3mol l-1, with a correlation
coefficient of 0.999. A set of measurements at +0.20 V versus SCE for 210-3 mol l-1 D-
fructose yielded a relative standard deviation for the steady-state current of 2.11%. The
biosensor selectivity against anionic interferents such as Lascorbate was enhanced by
the use of chemically modified graphite by a mild oxidation step. The biosensor was
found stable for 6 months and the assay of D-fructose by this electrode was not affected
by the presence of sugars or other interferents commonly found in food samples.
ENVIRONMENTAL APPLICATIONS
Toxicity
In environmental pollution monitoring, it is becoming a general opinion that chemical
analysis by itself does not provide sufficient information to assess the ecological risk of
polluted waters and wastewaters. In the European Union, along with more stringent
demands for water treatment (Council Directive 91/271/EEC), industrial and urban
wastewater effluents shall reach certain limits of nontoxicity before the effluent can be
discharged into the environment. Thus, much effort has been made during the last
years to develop and use different bioassays and biosensors for toxicity evaluation of
water samples. Whole organisms are used to measure the potential biological impact
(toxicity) of a water or soil sample. That is the case of the toxicity assays Microtox
(Azure, Bucks, UK), or ToxAlert (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). These systems are
based on the use of luminescent bacteria, Vibrio fischeri, to measure toxicity from
240
Agricultural Microbiology
CONCLUSIONS
Despite the huge potential of biosensors, and the ever-increasing number of biosensors
developed, commercially available biosensors are being applied to a restricted area of
the potential market. In general, biosensors for environmental analysis have seve ral
limitations: sensitivity, response time, and lifetime, which should be improved for them
to become a competitive analytical tool. The areas of development that are expected to
have an impact in biosensor technology are: immobilization techniques,
nanotechnology, miniaturization, and multisensor array determinations. However, a
crucial aspect may be the production of new sensing elements easy to synthesize and
with the capability to broaden the spectra of selectivities that can be reached by a
biosensor. At present, the preparation and production in large scales of biomolecules
such as enzymes or antibodies need an investment of time and knowledge. Synthetic
peptides and MIPs are contemplated as promising alternatives overcoming the above -
mentioned limitations. Unfortunately, the affinity accomplished by these synthetic
receptors is still several orders of magnitude below that of the antibodies. Improvement
in the affinity, specificity, and mass production of the molecular recognition
components may ultimately dictate the success or failure of detection technologies. The
241
www.AgriMoon.Com
242
Agricultural Microbiology
Lecture 32:
MICROBIAL PRODUCTS
The term Industrial Microbiology refers to the use of microorganisms for industrial
purposes. Such things as anticoagulants, antidepressants, vasodilators, herbicides,
insecticides, plant hormones, enzymes, and vitamins have been isolated from
microorganisms or produced in large quantities by genetically engineering the
organisms with foreign genes. In commercial industrial plants, microorganisms are
widely used to produce numerous organic materials that have far-reaching value and
application.
Antibiotic production
These are defined as substances produced by some micro-organisms which are in
some way lethal to other micro-organisms. It is thought that these substances give the
organisms that produce them (usually moulds or actinomycetes - which grow slowly)
some sort of advantage in competition with other micro-organisms (usually bacteria -
which grow fast) in the same habitat. However, their great medical advantage in
healing infections is that the purified forms of antibiotics are more or less harmless to
most humans. This means that they must act on some aspect of of the growth of micro-
organisms which differs from ordinary mammalian cells. There are in fact several
versions of Penicillin, variations on a common formula, produced by different strains of
Penicillium, or using different culture media and methods.
The Production of Antibiotics has been widespread since the pioneering efforts
of Florey and Chain in 1938. The importance of antibiotics to medicine has led to much
research into their discovery and production.
243
www.AgriMoon.Com
Useful antibiotics are often discovered using a screening process. To conduct such a
screen, isolates of many different microorganisms are cultured and then tested for
production of diffusible products that inhibit the growth of test organisms. Most
antibiotics identified in such a screen are already known and must therefore be
disregarded. The remainder must be tested for their selective toxicities and therapeutic
activities, and the best candidates can be examined and possibly modified.
A more modern version of this approach is a rational design program. This involves
screening directed towards finding new natural products that inhibit a specific target,
such as an enzyme only found in the target pathogen, rather than tests to show general
inhibition of a culture.
WINE PRODUCTION
Winemaking, or Vinification, is the production of wine, starting with selection of
the grapes or other produce and ending with bottling the finished wine. Although most
244
Agricultural Microbiology
wine is made from grapes, it may also be made from other fruit or non-toxic plant
material. Mead is a wine that is made with honey being the primary ingredient after
water.
Winemaking can be divided into two general categories: still wine production (without
carbonation) and sparkling wine production (with carbonation).
The science of wine and winemaking is known as oenology (in American
English, enology).
PROCESS
After the harvest, the grapes are taken into a winery and prepared for primary ferment,
at this stage red wine making diverges from white wine making. Red wine is made
from the must (pulp) of red or black grapes that undergo fermentation together with the
grape skins. White wine is made by fermenting juice which is made by pressing crushed
grapes to extract a juice; the skins are removed and play no further role. Occasionally
white wine is made from red grapes, this is done by extracting their juice with minimal
contact with the grapes' skins. Ros wines are made from red grapes where the juice is
allowed to stay in contact with the dark skins long enough to pick up a pinkish color,
but little of the tannins contained in the skins.
To start primary fermentation yeast is added to the must for red wine or juice for white
wine. During this fermentation, which often takes between one and two weeks,
the yeast converts most of the sugars in the grape juice into ethanol (alcohol) and
carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is lost to the atmosphere. After the primary
fermentation of red grapes the free run wine is pumped off into tanks and the skins are
pressed to extract the remaining juice and wine, the press wine blended with the free
run wine at the wine makers discretion. The wine is kept warm and the
remaining sugars are converted into alcohol and carbon dioxide. The next process in the
245
www.AgriMoon.Com
Variations on the above procedure exist. With sparkling wines such as Champagne, an
additional fermentation takes place inside the bottle, trapping carbon dioxide and
creating the characteristic bubbles. Sweet wines are made by ensuring that
some residual sugar remains after fermentation is completed. This can be done by
harvesting late (late harvest wine), freezing the grapes to concentrate the sugar (ice
wine), or adding a substance to kill the remaining yeast before fermentation is
completed; for example, high proof brandy is added when making port wine. In other
cases the winemaker may choose to hold back some of the sweet grape juice and add it
to the wine after the fermentation is done, a technique known as sssreserve.
The process produces wastewater, pomace, and lees that require collection, treatment,
and disposal or beneficial use.
246
Agricultural Microbiology
History
Early history Since 2500 BC yeasts have been used in bread and beverage production. In
1781 processes for preparing highly concentrated forms of yeast were established. In
1919 Endomyces vernalis yielded fats from sulphite liquor (from paper manufacture), and
similarly in 1941 employing Geotrichum.
"Food from oil"
In the 1960s, researchers at British Petroleum developed what they called "proteins-
from-oil process": a technology for producing single cell protein by yeast fed by waxy n-
paraffins, a product produced by oil refineries. Initial research work was done
by Alfred Champagnat at BP's Lavera Oil Refinery in France; a small pilot plant there
started operations in March in 1963, and the same construction of the second pilot plant,
at Grangemouth Oil Refinery in Britain, was authorized. The term SCP was coined in
1966 by Carol L. Wilson at MIT.
The "food from oil" idea became quite popular by the 1970s, with Champagnat being
awarded the UNESCO Science Prize in 1976, and paraffin-fed yeast facilities being built
in a number of countries. The primary use of the product was as poultry and cattle
feed.
247
www.AgriMoon.Com
The single cell protein needs to be dehydrated to approximately 10% moisture content
and/or acidified to aid in storage and prevent spoilage. The methods to increase the
concentrations to adequate levels, and de-watering process require equipment that is
expensive and not always suitable for small-scale operations. It is economically prudent
to feed the product locally and shortly after it is produced.
Examples:
Microbes employed include yeasts (Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Candida
utilis=Torulopsis and Geotrichum candidum(=Oidium lactis)), other fungi (Aspergillus
oryzae,Sclerotium rolfsii, Polyporus and Trichoderma), bacteria
(Rhodopseudomonas capsulata). and algae (Chlorella and Spirulina). Typical yields of 43 to
56%, with protein contents of 44% to 60%.
The fungus Scytalidium acidophilum grows at below pH 1, offering advantages of:
248
Agricultural Microbiology
249
www.AgriMoon.Com
1. Corynebacteria
2. Micrococci
3. Enterococci
4. Spores of Bacillus and Clostridium
5. Staphylococci
6. Coliforms
7. Lactic acid bacteria
o Lactobacilli
o Pediococci
o Leuconostocs
L. casei L.acidophilus
250
Agricultural Microbiology
PROCESS OF CHEESEMAKING: -
People have been making and eating yogurt for at least 5,400 years. Today, it is a
common food item throughout the world. A nutritious food with unique health
benefits, it is rich in protein, calcium, riboflavin, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12.
History
There is evidence of precultured milk products being produced as food for at least 4,500
years. The earliest yoghurts were probably spontaneously fermented by wild bacteria.
The oldest writings mentioning yogurt are attributed to Pliny the Elder, who remarked
that certain nomadic tribes knew how "to thicken the milk into a substance with an
agreeable acidity". The use of yoghurt by medieval Turks is recorded in the
books Diwan Lughat al-Turk by Mahmud Kashgari and Kutadgu Bilig by Yusuf Has
251
www.AgriMoon.Com
Hajibwritten in the 11th century. Both texts mention the word "yoghurt" in different
sections and describe its use by nomadic Turks. An early account of a European
encounter with yoghurt occurs in French clinical history: Francis I suffered from a
severe diarrhoea which no French doctor could cure. His ally Suleiman the
Magnificent sent a doctor, who allegedly cured the patient with yoghurt. Being grateful,
the French king spread around the information about the food which had cured him.
Raita is a condiment made with yoghurt and popular in India and Pakistan. Until the
1900s, yoghurt was a staple in diets of people in the Russian Empire (and
especially Central Asia and the Caucasus), Western Asia, South Eastern
Europe/Balkans, Central Europe, and India. Stamen Grigorov (18781945), a Bulgarian
student of medicine in Geneva, first examined the microflora of the Bulgarian yoghurt.
In 1905 he described it as consisting of a spherical and a rod-like lactic acid bacteria. In
1907 the rod-like bacteria was called Lactobacillus bulgaricus (now Lactobacillus delbrueckii
subsp. bulgaricus). The Russian Nobel laureate biologist Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov, from
the Institut Pasteur in Paris, was influenced by Grigorov's work and hypothesised that
regular consumption of yoghurt was responsible for the unusually long lifespans
of Bulgarian peasants. Believing Lactobacillus to be essential for good
health, Mechnikov worked to popularise yoghurt as a foodstuff throughout Europe.
Isaac Carasso industrialized the production of yoghurt. In 1919, Carasso, who was
from Ottoman Salonika, started a small yoghurt business in Barcelona and named the
business Danone ("little Daniel") after his son. The brand later expanded to the United
States under an Americanised version of the name: Dannon.
252
Agricultural Microbiology
Tarator is a cold, refreshing soup made of yoghurt and cucumber (dill, garlic, walnuts
and sunflower oil are sometimes added), popular in Bulgaria. Yoghurt with added
fruit jam was patented in 1933 by the Radlick Mlkrna dairy in Prague. It was
introduced to the United States in 1947, by Dannon.
Yoghurt was first introduced to the United States by Armenian immigrants Sarkis and
Rose Colombosian, who started "Colombo and Sons Creamery" in Andover,
Massachusetts in 1929. Colombo Yogurt was originally delivered around New England
in a horse-drawn wagon inscribed with the Armenian word "mad zoon" which was
later changed to "yogurt", the Turkish name of the product, as Turkish was the lingua
franca between immigrants of the various Near Eastern ethnicities [citation needed] who
were the main consumers at that time. Yoghurt's popularity in the United States was
enhanced in the 1950s and 1960s, when it was presented as a health food. By the late
20th century yoghurt had become a common American food item and Colombo Yogurt
was sold in 1993 to General Mills, which discontinued the brand in 2010.
Tzatziki is an appetiser made with yoghurt, popular in Greece and Bulgaria, where it is
called Dry Tarator. Yoghurt is nutritionally rich in protein, calcium, riboflavin,vitamin
B6 and vitamin B12. It has nutritional benefits beyond those of milk. People who are
moderately lactose-intolerant can consume yoghurt without ill effects, because much of
the lactose in the milk precursor is converted to lactic acid by the bacterial culture.
Yoghurt may also be used in preventing antibiotic-associateddiarrhea. Yoghurt is
believed to promote good gum health, possibly because of the effect of lactic acid
present in yoghurt.
A study published in the International Journal of Obesity (11 January 2005) also found that
the consumption of low-fat yoghurt can promote weight loss, especially due to
the calcium in the yoghurt.
253
www.AgriMoon.Com
Khyar w Laban (cucumber and yogurt salad) is a popular dish in Lebanon. Also, a wide
variety of local Lebanese dishes are cooked with yogurt like "Kibbi bi Laban" etc..
Rahmjoghurt, a creamy yoghurt with much higher fat content (10%) than most yoghurts
offered in English-speaking countries (Rahm is German for "cream"), is available
in Germany and other countries.
Cream-top yoghurt is yoghurt made with unhomogenized milk. A layer of cream rises
to the top, forming a rich yoghurt cream. Cream-top yoghurt was first made
commercially popular in the United States by Brown Cow of Newfield, New York,
bucking the trend toward low- and non-fat yoghurts. Jameed is yoghurt which is salted
and dried to preserve it. It is popular in Jordan. Zabadi is the type of yoghurt made
in Egypt, usually from the milk of the Egyptian water buffalo. It is particularly
associated with Ramadan fasting, as it is thought to prevent thirst during all-day
fasting.
254
Agricultural Microbiology
places dudh is also served with plain rice. Dahi is a yoghurt of the Indian subcontinent,
known for its characteristic taste and consistency. The worddahi seems to be derived
from the Sanskrit word dadhi, one of the five elixirs, or panchamrita, often used in
Hindu ritual. Dahi also holds cultural symbolism in many homes in
the Mithilanchal region of Bihar. It is found in different flavours, two of which are
famous: sour yoghurt (tauk doi) and sweet yoghurt (meesti or podi doi). In India, it is often
used in cosmetics mixed with turmeric and honey. Sour yoghurt is also used as a hair
conditioner by women in many parts of India.
Srikhand, a popular dessert in India, is made from drained yoghurt, saffron, cardamom,
nutmeg and sugar and sometimes fruits such as mango or pineapple.
Strained yoghurts
Strained yoghurts are types of yoghurt which are strained through a paper or cloth
filter, traditionally made of muslin, to remove the whey, giving a much thicker
consistency and a distinctive, slightly tangy taste.
Labneh is a strained yoghurt used for sandwiches popular in Arab countries. Olive oil,
cucumber slices, olives, and various green herbs may be added. It can be thickened
further and rolled into balls, preserved in olive oil, and fermented for a few more
weeks. It is sometimes used with onions, meat, and nuts as a stuffing for a variety of
pies or kebbeh balls. Some types of strained yoghurts are boiled in open vats first, so
that the liquid content is reduced. The popular East Indian dessert, a variation of
traditional dahi called mishti dahi, offers a thicker, more custard-like consistency, and is
usually sweeter than western yoghurts. Strained yoghurt is also enjoyed in Greece and
is the main component of tzadziki, a well-known accompaniment
to gyros and souvlaki pita sandwiches.
255
www.AgriMoon.Com
YOGURT PRODUCTS:
****** ******
This Book Download From e-course of ICAR
Visit for Other Agriculture books, News,
Recruitment, Information, and Events at
www.agrimoon.com
Give FeedBack & Suggestion at info@agrimoon.com
Disclaimer:
The information on this website does not warrant or assume any legal
liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of the
courseware contents.
The contents are provided free for noncommercial purpose such as teaching,
training, research, extension and self learning.
****** ******
256