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FIND OUT MORE. Digestion 144–145 • Micro-organisms 85


The use of microbes (micro-


organisms) to produce and process


materials is called biotechnology.


Bacteria and yeasts are used to


produce products, such as


yoghurt, cheese, and wine,


by. FERMENTATION.


HOW DO WE USE MICROBES?
Microbes are like tiny chemical factories. They
make chemicals called enzymes (biological
catalysts) to break down chemicals in their
surroundings for food. As microbes feed and
multiply, they produce chemical by-products. Yeast
cells make an enzyme that turns sugar into alcohol.

HOW ARE GRAPES MADE INTO WINE?
Natural yeast on grape skins ferments the fruit sugars
to produce alcohol. Fermentation stops after 10 to 30
days, when all the sugars have been used up, or when
the alcohol content is 12 to 15 per cent, which stops
the yeast cells working. The wine is sealed in barrels.
If it is exposed to the air, the alcohol is oxidized to
acetic acid (vinegar), and the wine turns sour.

WHAT ARE ANTIBIOTICS?
Some microbes produce chemicals that kill disease-
spreading bacteria. These chemicals are antibiotics.
They either destroy the bacteria completely, or stop it
multiplying. The first antibiotic, penicillin, was made
from a mould that grows on bread. Its antibiotic
action was discovered by chance in 1928.

HOW IS MILK TURNED INTO CHEESE?
An enzyme called rennin is added to milk. It ferments
the milk sugars to produce lactic acid. The acid
separates the milk into solid curds and liquid whey.
The curds are pressed into cheeses. Microbes continue
to work in the cheese as it ages, making its flavour
stronger and changing its texture.

Fermentation is the action of yeasts and bacteria on the sugars
in fruit, grains, milk, and other food. Yeast cells added to bread
dough feed on its natural sugars, turning them into carbon dioxide
and water. This makes the dough rise to make light, fluffy bread.

4 PENICILLIN GROWTH
This macrophotograph (close-up) shows
a disc-shaped culture (growth) of the
green penicillin mould growing on agar jelly
in a glass petri dish. Penicillin is an antibiotic
substance made by the mould Penicillium notatum.
It was among the first antibiotics to be discovered,
and is still widely used to treat infections.

4 WINE-MAKING
In the traditional champagne method for making
sparkling (fizzy) wine, the wine continues to
ferment after it has been bottled. The bottles are
turned upside down to allow the yeast to settle
onto the cork. Finally the cork is loosened briefly,
and the gas pressure shoots the sediment (settled
particles of yeast) from the bottle.

FERMENTATION


4 CHEESE-MAKING
The type of cheese made depends
on the variety of microbes
added, and the conditions of
fermentation. As the milk curdles,
the curds are separated from the
whey. This batch will become
Baby Swiss cheeses.

Biotechnology

1 YEAST
This electron microscope picture
shows individual yeast cells. Some
of the cells are reproducing by
budding (producing two cells
from one).


Yeast cells
sink downwards

Carbon dioxide gas
produced during
fermentation gives
champagne its fizz

SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
Scottish, 1881-1955
Fleming won the Nobel Prize
for Medicine in 1945 for the
discovery of penicillin. While
searching for compounds that
would kill bacteria without
harming the body, he noticed
that bacteria cultured (grown)
in a glass dish had died
around spots of mould.
The mould had blown in
through a window. Fleming
extracted the antibiotic
substance from the mould
and called it penicillin.

biotechnology

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