The Isolation, Preservation
& Improvement of Industrially
Important Micro-organisms
Introduction
The first stage in the screening for microorganisms of
potential industrial application is their isolation.
Isolation involves obtaining either pure or mixed cultures
followed by their assessment to determine which carry out
the desired reaction or produce the desired product.
The isolate must eventually carry out the process
economically
Therefore, the selection of the culture to be used is a
compromise between the productivity of the organism and
the economic constraints of the process
Cont…
Criteria as being important in the choice of organism:
the nutritional characteristics of the organism: using a
very cheap medium or a pre-determined one
the optimum temperature of the organism
the reaction of the organism with the equipment to be
employed and the suitability of the organism to the type of
process to be used
the stability of the organism and its amenability to genetic
manipulation
the productivity of the organism, measured in its ability to
convert substrate into product and to give a high yield of
product per unit time
the ease of product recovery from the culture
The Isolation of Industrially Important
Micro-organism
Isolation methods utilizing selection of the desired
characteristic:
enrichment liquid culture
enrichment cultures using solidified media
• Isolation methods not utilizing selection of the
desired characteristic
• Screening methods
Enrichment Liquid Culture
Frequently carried out in shake flask
By inoculating the enriched culture into identical fresh
medium (sub-culture)
Sub-culturing may be repeated several times before the
dominant organism is isolated by spreading a small
inoculum of the enriched culture into solid medium
The time of sub-culture in an enrichment process is critical
and should correspond to the point at which the desired
organism is dominant.
The prevalence of an organism in a batch enrichment
culture will depend on its maximum specific growth rate
compared with the maximum specific growth rates of the
other organisms capable of growth in the inoculum
Enrichment Cultures Using Solidified
Media
The isolation of certain enzyme producers
The use of a selective medium incorporating the substrate of
the enzyme which encourages the growth of the producing
types
Example:
- isolated species of Bacillus producing alkaline protease
- soils of various pHs were used as the initial inoculum
- the number of producers isolated correlated with the
alkalinity of the soil sample
- spread onto the surface of media agar at pH 9-10,
containing a dispersion of an insoluble protein
- Colonies which produced a clear zone due to the digestion
of the insoluble protein were taken to be alkaline protease
producers
Isolation Methods Not Utilizing of The
Desired Characteristic
Production of antibiotics and growth promoters
Therefore, a pool of organisms has to be isolated and
subsequently tested for the desired characteristic
The major problem- reisolation of strains which have
already been screened many times before
An environmental sample contains a vast variety of
organism
Design of isolation media based on knowledge of only one
taxon may inadvertently result in the preferential isolation
of undesirable types
Example: used the statistical stepwise discrimination
analysis (SDA) technique to design media for the positive
selection of antibiotic producing soil isolates
- by nutritional test
Screening Methods
More precisely targeted to identify the desired activity
The evolution of antibiotic screens serves as an
excellent illustration of the development of more
precise, targeted systems
Antibiotics were initially detected by growing the
potential producer on an agar plate in the presence of
an organism (or organisms) against which
antimicrobial action was required
Alternatively, the microbial isolate could be grown in
liquid culture and the cell-free broth tested for activity
The Preservation of Industrially
Important Micro-organisms
The culture used to initiate an industrial fermentation
must be viable and free from contamination
Cultures must be stored in such way as to eliminate
genetic change, protect against contamination and retain
viability
Storage at reduced temperature
storage on agar slopes
storage under liquid nitrogen
Storage in a dehydrated form:
dried culture
lyophilization
• Quality control of preserved stock culture
Storage at Reduced Temperature
Storage at agar slopes:
- Store in a refrigerator (5°C) or freezer (-20°) and
sub-cultured at approximately 6-monthly intervals
- The time of sub-culture may be extended to 1 year
if the slopes are covered with sterile medicinal
grade mineral oil
Cont…
Storage under liquid nitrogen
- the metabolic activities of micro-organism may be reduced
considerably by storage at the very low temperatures (-150°C to
-196°C) which may be achieved using a liquid nitrogen
refrigerator
- this approach is the most universally applicable of all
preservation methods
- technique: growing a culture to the maximum stationary phase,
resuspending the cells in a cryoprotective agent (10% ethanol)
and freezing the suspension in a sealed ampoules before storage
under liquid nitrogen
- viability maybe predictable even after a period of many years
- The liquid nitrogen evaporates and must be replenished
regularly
Storage in a Dehydrated Form
Dried culture:
- Dried soil culture have been used widely for
culture preservation
- Moist, sterile soil may be inoculated with a
culture and incubated for several days for some
growth to occur and then allowed to dry at room
temperature for approximately 2 weeks
- The dried soil may be stored in a dry atmosphere
or preferably, in a refrigerator
Cont…
Lyophilization:
- Lyophilization/freeze-drying involves the freezing of a
culture followed by its drying under vacuum, which result
in the sublimation of the cell water
- Growing the culture to the maximum stationary phase
and resuspending the cells in a protective medium (milk,
serum, sodium glutamate)
- a few drops of the suspension are transferred to an
ampoule, which is then frozen and subjected to a high
vacuum until sublimation is complete, after which the
ampoule is sealed
- the ampoule may be stored in a refrigerator and the cell
may be remain viable for 10 years or more
Quality Control of Preserved Stock
Cultures
Each batch of newly preserved cultures should be routinely
checked to ensure their quality
A single colony of the culture to be preserved is inoculated
into a shake flask and the growth of the culture observed to
ensure a typical growth pattern
After a further shake flask sub-culture the broth is used to
prepare a large number of storage ampoules
At least 3% of the ampoules are reconstituted and the
cultures assessed for purity, viability and productivity
If the samples fail any one of these tests the entire batch
should be destroyed
Therefore, stock cultures may be retained and used with
confidence
The Improvement of Industrial Micro-
organism
The selection of induced mutants synthesizing
improved levels of primary metabolites
modification of the permeability
the isolation of mutants which do not produce
feedback inhibitors or repressors
the isolation of mutants that do not recognize the
presence of inhibitors and repressors
The Selection of Induced Mutants Synthesizing
Improved Levels of Primary Metabolites
The levels of primary metabolites in micro-organisms are
regulated by feedback systems
The major systems: feedback inhibition and feedback
repression
Feedback inhibition: the end product of a biochemical
pathway inhibits the activity of an enzyme catalyzing one
of the reactions of the pathway
- Inhibition acts by the end product binding to the enzyme
at an allosteric site which result in interference with the
attachment of the enzyme to its substrate
Cont..
Feedback repression: the end of the product (or
derivative of the end product) of a biochemical
pathway prevents the synthesis of an enzymes
catalyzing a reactions of the pathway
- repression occurs at the gene level by a
derivative of the end product combining with the
genome in such a way as to prevent the
transcription of the gene into messenger RNA,
resulting in the prevention of enzymes synthesis
The use of recombinant systems
the application of the parasexual cycle
the application of protoplast fusion techniques
the application of recombinant DNA techniques
The improvement of industrial strains by
modifying properties other than the yield of
product
the selection of stable strains
the selection of strains resistant to infection
the selection of non-foaming strain
the selection of strains which are resistant to components
in the medium
the selection of morphologically favourable strains
the selection of strains which are tolerant of low oxygen
tension
the elimination of undesirable products from a production
strain
the development of strains producing new fermentation
products