Scope of Industrial Microbiology
Scope of Industrial Microbiology
Scope of Industrial Microbiology
Microbiology
NATURE OF BIOTECHNOLOGY AND
INDUSTRIAL MICROBIOLOGY
• definition of Biotechnology “any
technological application that uses biological
systems, living organisms, or derivatives
thereof, to make or modify products or
processes for specific use.”
• Some of these include the use of
microorganisms to make the antibiotic, penicillin
or the dairy product, yoghurt amino acids or
enzymes are also examples of biotechnology.
• Industrial microbiology may be defined as the
study of the large-scale and profit-motivated
production of microorganisms or their products
for direct use, or as inputs in the manufacture of
other goods.
• Thus yeasts may be produced for direct
consumption as food for humans or as animal
feed, or for use in bread-making; their product,
ethanol, may also be consumed in the form of
alcoholic beverages, or used in the manufacture
of perfumes, pharmaceuticals, etc.
• Industrial microbiology is clearly a branch of
biotechnology and includes the traditional and
nucleic acid aspects.
CHARACTERISTICS OF
INDUSTRIAL MICROBIOLOGY
• The discipline of microbiology is often
divided into sub-disciplines such as
medical microbiology, environmental
microbiology, food microbiology and
industrial microbiology.
• The characteristics of industrial
microbiology can be highlighted by
comparing its features with those of
another sub-division of microbiology,
medical microbiology.
Industrial vs Medical
Microbiology
• They differ in at least three different ways:
First is the immediate motivation:
• In industrial microbiology the immediate
motivation is profit and the generation of wealth.
• In medical microbiology, the immediate concern is
to offer expert opinion to the doctor about, for
example the spectrum of antibiotic susceptibility of
the microorganisms isolated from a diseased
condition so as to restore the patient back to good
health.
• The generation of wealth is of course at the back of
the mind of the medical microbiologist.
The second difference is:
• That the microorganisms per se used in
routine medical microbiology have little or
no direct economic value, outside the
contribution which they make to ensuring
the return to good health of the patient
who may then pay for the services.
• In industrial microbiology the
microorganisms involved or their products
are very valuable.
The third difference is the scale at which
the microorganisms are handled.
• In industrial microbiology, the scale is
large and the organisms may be cultivated
in fermentors as large as 50,000 liters or
larger.
• In routine medical microbiology the scale
at which the pathogen is handled is limited
to a loopful or a few milliliters.
• If a pathogen which normally would have
no economic value were to be handled on
the large scale used in industrial
microbiology, it would most probably be to
prepare a vaccine against the pathogen.
• Under that condition, the pathogen would
then acquire an economic value and a
profit-making potential; the operation
would properly be termed industrial
microbiology.
Multi-disciplinary or Team-work Nature of
Industrial Microbiology