KJB - The use of microorganisms in biotechnology Flashcards

1
Q

What is biotechnology?

A

Using biological entities to manufacture a product

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2
Q

What are the four reasons why microorganisms are so useful for biotechnology?

A
  • high metabolic rate
  • wide range of enzyme capability
  • reactions carried out under mild conditions
  • can grow on plentiful supplies of cheap nutrients
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3
Q

Why do microorgansims have a a high metabolic rate?

A

Microorganisms are SMALL and therefore have a LARGE SURFACE AREA: VOLUME RATIO. This allows a RAPID transport of nutrients into the cell.

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4
Q

What effect does surface area of a microorganism have on metabolic rate?

A

The larger the surface area, the higher the metabolic rate.

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5
Q

Expand on the wide range of enzymatic capability of microorganisms. Give an example of saprophytes.

A

Fungi.
They can produce many different enzymes.
They can thus produce an extensive range of metabolic end products (which can break down almost anything).

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6
Q

Give an example of a saprophyte.

A

Fungi

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7
Q

Define saprophyte.

A

A plant, fungus, or microorganism that lives on dead or decaying organic matter/ plant waste.

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8
Q

Microorganisms can undergo reactions under mild conditions. Why is this better than many chemical reactions?

A
Chemical reactions require
- high temp
- high pressures
- the use of organic solvents
This can be EXPENSIVE
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9
Q

Microbial systems are better than chemical systems because:

A
The reactions require:
- low temp
- low pressures
- use AQUEOUS solvents
Therefore, there are LOWER energy costs
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10
Q

What are examples of the cheap nutrients that microorganisms grow on? What is another benefit of using these?

A
  • Cornsteep liqour
  • Waste paper pulp
  • Petrleum products
  • Molasses

THEY ARE READILY AVAILABLE

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11
Q

What sort of materials can be produced from biotechnology?

A
  • The cells themselves
  • Large molecules such as enzymes, polysaccharides and proteins (both natural and bioengineered)
  • Microbial transformations
  • Primary metabolic products (vitamins, organic acids, alcohol)
  • Secondary metabolic products (antibiotics)
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12
Q

What sort of materials can be produced from biotechnology? The cells themselves. e.g.

A
  • Baker’s Yeast
  • Probiotic yogurts/ supplements
  • Mushrooms
  • Marmite (yeast extract)
  • Quorn
  • Single cell protein for animal feed
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13
Q

Small organisms not only have a high metabolic rate but also a high _____ content. List the following in protein content from highest to lowest: soya bean, meat, yeast

A

protein
yeast (40-50%)
soya bean (35%)
meat (20%)

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14
Q

How are single cell proteins made? Name what other materials are made from this process

A

Bioengineering process takes in grease and bio-sludge from waste treatment and converts it to SCP, fertiliser, recycled water and biogas.

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15
Q

Name a microbial enzyme and its use for industrial applications

A

Pectinase. Derived from Aspergillus spp. Clarification of fruit juices and wines

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16
Q

Name a microbial polysaccharide/ polymer and its use for industrial applications

A

Alginate. Derived from Pseudomonas sp. Used in a wide range of pharmaceutical formulations,

17
Q

Name a microbial protein and its use for industrial applications/ therapeutic use.

A

Insulin. Therapeutic use is treatment of diabetes

18
Q

Primary metabolic products are synthesised by an

A

organism in the course of active growth and metabolism. Primary metabolite accumulates as number of cells producing it accumulates

19
Q

Primary metabolites..

A
High cell concentrations give rise to high yields of primary metabolites. Therefore, microorganisms are often mutated to greatly overproduce the product of interest e.g.
Alcohol
Vitamins
Amino acids
Nucleotides
Organic acids (including vinegar)
20
Q

What do mutated cells do? (in relation to primary metabolites)

A

They vastly overproduce the product of interest. UNFORTUNATELY normally, enzymes are unstable and can back mutate therefore, in order to ensure only the desired product is produced, we either mutate or block any other enzymes that may act on the desired product and convert it to an undesired product so that they are no longer able to do this.

21
Q

There are __ essential amino acids that have some kind of use either industrially, food production or therapeutically

A

20

22
Q

When are secondary metabolites produced?

What condition is needed to achieve high amounts of secondary metabolites?

A

When the organism/ cells stop growing/ have finished actively dividing and are in STATIONARY phase.
Need slow cell growth rate but high cell yields in order to produce large secondary metabolite yields

23
Q

Examples of secondary metabolites include

A

Antibiotics
Toxins
Alkaloids

24
Q

Class growth curve includes

A

Lag, Log, Stationary phase, Death/ Decline phase (NOT always observed)

25
Q

Expand on the classic growth curve and state whether you can relate it to natural environments?

A
NO
It is a laboratory artefact
It arises as a result of growing a pure culture of cells in a fixed volume of nutritious medium (Batch culture)
Cells don't grow like this in nature.
In the natural environment, growth is much slower because:
- nutrients are in short supply
- competition with other MOs
- predators/ immune system
- Temperature is not optimal for growth
26
Q

Cell growth can be manipulated by varying the concentration of

A

growth limiting substrate.

27
Q

The more you decrease the growth limiting substrate,

A

the more you decrease growth rate of culture

28
Q

Growth rate is proportional to

A

concentration of the limiting substrate

29
Q

How can you achieve slow growth rate and high cell yields?

A

Nutritious mediums give high growth rate and high cell yields.
Poor mediums give slow growth rate and low cell yields.
Need a medium rich in nutrients but essential components only slowly fed in.
Cells therefore grow slowly as nutrients are in limited supply

30
Q

What type of culture allows for slow growth rate and high cell yields?

A

Fed batch culture.
Rich medium but supplied to growing culture slowly.
Result - slow growth rate and high cell concentration

31
Q

Fed-batch culture with limiting substrate e.g. GLUCOSE. Explain how this would happen

A

Cells are inoculated in incomplete rich medium (contains all components necessary for growth except for one - glucose).
Glucose is then added slowly to the culture and as the concentration in broth is slow, growth is slow
By the end of the process, the same amount of glucose would have been added as would have been in a complete rich medium but just over a longer period of time

32
Q

Chemostat cultures are

A

There is a constant rate of medium input. At the same time you are feeding out waste, thus culture volume remains constant. Steady state growth can be maintained indefinitely but not used often in pharmaceutical production due to risk of contamination