Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
Economic uses and benefits of microorganisms WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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ECOLOGY OF THE ORAL CAVITY• see

MICROBIAL FLORA OF THE ORAL CAVITY, DENTAL CARIES

ECOLOGY OF THE STOMACH AND

GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT•seeMICROBIAL
FLORA OF THE STOMACH AND GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT

ECONOMIC USES AND BENEFITS OF

MICROORGANISMSEconomic uses and benefits of microorganisms

Microorganismshave been used as tools for the production of
products for millennia. Even in ancient times, the ability to
produce vinegar by allowing water to percolate through wood
shavings was known and widely practiced. Likewise, the
transformationof a yeastsuspension into beer or a suspension
of crushed grapes into wine was common knowledge. The
basis of these events may not have been known, but that did
not impede the sale or trade of such products.
These economic uses of microorganisms are the earliest
examples of biotechnology. As the knowledge of bacteriaand
yeast-chemical behaviors grew, other biotechnological uses
for the microbes were found. A few examples include the use
of the bacterium Lactobacillus acidophilusto produce yogurt,
the exploitation of a number of different bacteria to produce a
variety of cheeses, and the fermentationof cabbage to produce
sauerkraut. In the agricultural sector, the discovery of the abil-
ity of Rhizobium spp.to convert elemental nitrogen to a form
that was useable by a growing plant, led to the use of the
microorganism as a living fertilizer that grew in association
with the plant species.
In more modern times, the use of microorganisms as
biotechnological agents of profit has not only continued but
has explosively increased. Indeed the biotechnology sector as
it is recognized today, is already a multi-billion dollar sector
worldwide.
The unraveling of the structure of DNA (deoxyribonu-
cleic acid), various species of ribonucleic acid(RNA), and the
various processes whereby the manufacture of protein from the
nucleic acid templates occurs was pivotal in advancing the use
of microorganisms as factories. As important was the discovery
of how to remove DNA from one region of the genome and
move the DNA in a controlled way to another region of the
same DNA, or DNA in a completely different organism
(prokaryotic or eukaryotic). These genesplicing technologies,
which can be accomplished by various splicing and reanneal-
ing enzymes, or by the use of virusesor mobile regions of viral
DNA (such as transposons) as vectors have allowed biotech-
nologists to create what are termed “designer genes,” which are
designed for a specific purpose. This ability has fueled the use
of microorganisms for economic gain and/or benefit.
The gene for the production of human insulin has been
transferred into the genome of the common intestinal tract
bacterium Escherichia coli. Successful expression and excre-
tion of human insulin by the bacteria allows the production of
a large amount of insulin. Additionally, because the insulin is

identical to that produced in a human being, the chance of
immune reaction against the protein is virtually nonexistent.
The example of insulin reflects both the health benefit of the
use of microbes and the economic benefit to be realized, since
the mass production of insulin that is possible using bacteria
lowers the cost of the product.
Other medical uses of microorganisms, particularly in
the production of antibiotics, have been the greatest boon to
humans and other animals. The list of maladies that can now
be treated using microbiologically derived compounds is
lengthy, and includes cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, hepatitisB,
Karposi’s sarcoma, rejection of transplanted organs, growth
hormone deficiency, and cancer. The worldwide sales of med-
ical and pharmaceutical drugs of microbial origin now
exceeds U.S. $13 billion annually.
Microorganisms have also been harnessed as factories
to produce compounds that are used in areas as divers as tex-
tile manufacture, agriculture, and nutrition. Enzymes discov-
ered in bacteria that can exist at very elevated temperatures
(thermophilic, or “heat loving” bacteria) cab be used to age
denim to produce a “pre-washed” look. Similar enzymes are
being exploited in laundry detergent that operates in hot water.

Dispensing beer into kegs.

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