Bio Permentiation
Bio Permentiation
Bio Permentiation
Microbial screening.
93 C
- Wild strains.
Microbial yield improvement
43 C
- Mutation.
- Recombinant DNA. 21 C
- Genetically engineered. 4C
Microbial selection.
Industrial microorganism
Types of fermentation 8
Secondary
metabolites
Primary
metabolites
Batch fermenter system 15
Continuous fermentation 16
It is an open system.
Continuously sterile nutrient is added and
the converted nutrient is taken out from
the fermentor.
In continuous process cell loss as a result
of outflow must be balanced by growth
of the microorganism.
Effect of flow rate on substrate17
concentration
The relationship between biomass (X), the concentration of limiting nutrients (C) ,and
the dilution rate (D) are important factors in continuous
Continuous fermenter system 18
Important factors for 19
continuous fermentation
The system must be stable for at least 500
hours.
Maintaining sterile conditions for all period of
fermentation time.
The composition of nutrients must be
constant all the time.
Maintaining the strain stability for constant
high production yield (concerning about
reverse mutation).
Semi-continuous 20
fermentation
Semi-continuous fermentations, in
which a fraction of a fermentation
is replaced with fresh media at
regular intervals.
Classification of fermentation 21
Classification is according to product formation:
- TYPE I:
Ex
Substrate A P product
E1 E2 E3 E4
Substrate A B C D P product
- Type II:
E1 E2 E3 E4
Substrate A B C D P-Primary Metabolites
Es1
Es2 Es3 Es4
E F G P-Secondary Metabolites
Enzymes 22
E+S ES E+P
Substrate binding Catalytic step
E= enzyme E=enzyme
S= Substrate P= product
E+S E+P
Enzyme/substrate 24
interaction
Factors Effects Enzymes
Catalytic Activity 25
Temperature: The optimum is generally 40-600C.
Some enzymes exhibit an optimum at almost 1000C.
Value of PH: The optimum generally in the range
from 5-7. Extreme values of 1.5-10.5 have been
found.
Activation: Many chemical activates the catalytic
enzymes activity, Such as inorganic ions.
Inhibitors: Many chemical inhibits the catalytic
enzymes activity
There are two types of enzymes inhibition:
Irreversible inhibitors (competitive inhibition) and
reversible inhibitors (uncompetitive inhibition).
Substrate inhibition: High concentration of substrate
may inhibit the catalytic activity of an enzyme.
End-product inhibition: In the case of multi enzyme
system (catalytic inhibition).
Factors effecting enzymes 26
activity
Activators
27
(Cofactors and Coenzymes)
Some enzymes do not need any additional
components to show full activity.
Cofactors can be either inorganic (metals) or
organic compounds (flavin and heme).
Coenzymes include NAD+, NADP+ and ATP.
These coenzymes transfer chemical group between
enzymes.
The chemical groups carried by the hydride ion (H+)
carried by NADH or NADPH.
NAD+ + 2H + + 2e- NADH / NADP+ + 2O-2 + 2H+ NADPH + 2O2