Microbiology and Industry |
Microbiology
and Industry
Industrial Microbiology and the Food
Industry:
- Yeast is used make breads, baked goods, alcohol, yogurt and
other foods and drink items.
- Today�s yeast are specially engineered to work in large
scale industrial applications.
- Specialized bacteria and molds are used to make cheeses of
different types.
- Biofertilizers include bacteria such as Rhizobia that fix
nitrogen.
- Food additives increase nutritional value, retard spoilage,
change consistency and enhance flavor. These may be natural
compounds such as guar gum and xanthan gum or flavor enhancers
and vitamins.
Industrial Microbiology and Medicine:
- Biosensors are monitors used in the detection of specific
targets in the environment, human body or other organisms.
- Antibiotic production is a capacity that many microbes have
naturally.
- Microbes have been developed as a drug delivery system.
- Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) has been exploited to make and
deliver vaccines and other bioactive materials.
- Microbes have been developed that degrade oil so that they
it may be more easily extracted.
- Microbes are involved in the production of paper.
Industrial Microbiology and Economics:
- In the cosmetic industry the botulism toxin derived from
Clostridium botulinum is utilized.
- Biopesticides have been developed for the control of insect,
nematodes and other pathogens that effect plants.
- Synthetic energy fuels such as ethanol, methane, hydrogen
and hydrocarbons are produced by microbes.
- Gasohol which is a 9:1 blend of gasoline and ethanol is a
popular fuel alternative. The ethanol is produced as a by
product of yeast fermentation.
- Microbes have been used in mining. An example of this is
the recovery of metals is facilitated by bacteria by helping to
solubilize it making it more easily extracted.
- Microorganisms have been used to clean up the environment in
a process called bioremediation. In bioremediation a microbe is
introduced into an environment where its natural metabolism
results in the detoxification or break down of hazardous
chemicals or pollutants.
Specialized Microbes:
- Rhizobia are bacteria that fix nitrogen and make it
available for plant nutrition and growth. They form nodules on
the roots of legumes.
- Azolla is a fee floating water plant that fixes nitrogen in
association with cyanobacteria. It acts as a renewable
biofertilizer.
- Azotobacter are nitrogen fixing bacteria that do not form
nodules on plant roots or associate with legumes. They are free
living and in addition to fixing nitrogen they can produce
antibiotics and beneficial growth substances.
- Azospirillum fix nitrogen inside plant roots. They produce
beneficial compounds for plant growth and can survive in wetland
conditions as well as soils.
- Mycorrhiza are fungi that form symbiotic relationships with
plant roots. Vesicular arbuscular mycorrhiza (VAM) is the most
important member of this group. VAM colonies take up nutrients
and water which is available for the plant and they act as root
extensions.
Definitions:
- Probiotics are live microbes that may have a beneficial
affect on a host eating them.
- Biofertilizers are living microbes that enrich the nutrient
quality of soil.
- Biopesticides are microbes which are used to manage pests
including insects, nematode or other organisms.
- Food additives are substances used to enhance the
nutritional value, stabilize or increase the palatability of a
food.
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