Penicilium Chrysogenum
Penicilium Chrysogenum
Penicilium Chrysogenum
Submitted by –
SHASHI SHARMA
INTRODUCTION
INDUSTRIAL IMPORTANCE
USES
DRAWBACKS
RESEARCH PAPERS
RECENT RESEARCH
FUTURE
REFERENCES
PENICILIUM CHRYSOGENUM
INTRODUCTION
Penicillium species are heterotrophic. The pathogenic species feed off of the
fruit they destroy.
INDUSTERIAL IMP0RTANCE
P. chrysogenum has been used industrially to produce penicillin and
xanthocillin X, to treat pulp mill waste, and to produce the enzymes
polyamine oxidase, phospho-gluconate dehydrogenase, and glucose oxidase.
Penicillium are a osmotolerant, meaning that they grow better with high water
levels, they are ble to tolerate low water potential.
it is important to have the genome sequence of this species for analysis when
considering the emergence of new drug resistant strains of bacteria.
USES
Animals were fed a control diet first, and an increase in weight proved the
formulation to be satisfactory. The changeover from the control to the
experimental diet was sudden, and initially caused a decrease in the weight of
the experimental mice.
This supports the view that dried mycelium can be substituted as a protein
source for soybean meal, provided it is made more palatable and less
disagreeable in odor.
Penicillin was the prime candidate for an antibacterial antibiotic for the
following reasons:
• Penicillin kills gram-positive bacteria very well. On the plate to the left, P.
chrysogenum was inoculated into the center of a lawn of Staphylococcus
aureus. the clear zone of inhibition of growth of S. aureus.
• Penicillin causes no ill effects in humans and other animals, except for
allergies in about 10% of humans. penicillin allergies are usually caused by
its binding to serum proteins, causing an IgE-mediated inflammation.
RESEARCH PAPERS
DRAWBACKS
CURRENT RESEARCH
The search for a complete understanding of the biosynthetic pathways for the
production of penicillin in Penicilliumchrysogenum is still an active area of research.
PAF may also affect the permeability of the membranes of filamentous fungi
by catalyzing the leaking of potassium out of the cells. Not all fungi are
affected by it and the exact mechanism of action of PAF on cells is unknown.
Amylases have been some of the most important enzymes in the eyes of
humans for thousands of years. They are a required work horse in the
processes of alcoholic fermentation.
Cheap agricultural by-products such as wheat bran and sunflower oil meal in
combination have been fermented with Penicilliumchrysogenum which
produces α-amylase. This is a low cost way to produce the product; however,
large scale experiments are needed to ensure industrial application.
One of the things Penicillium is most famous for is the drug penicillin. It was
used to create the first antibiotic.
The present study describes the isolation and identification of native isolates
of Penicilliumchrysogenum.
Several fungalisolates obtained from different samples comprising of fruits,
vegetables, bread and grains from market around Faisalabadwere identified as
Penicilliumspecies by their morphological features.
Slide culture method was adopted for the identificationof fungal isolates. Only
two isolates, one from spoiled mango and other from maize were found
closely related to Penicilliumchrysogenum.
Most of the cultural characteristics of Penicilliumchrysogenum isolates were
observed on Sabouraud's glucose
The effects of penicillin are not as great as they once were. This is due to a
number of factors which are all summed up in penicillin resistance. In other
words, the bacteria are becoming immune to the effects of penicillin.
This is brought on by many things which all are linked back to good ol’
Charles Darwin and his theory on selection of the fittest.
When patients are given penicillin antibiotics and stop taking the medication
after “feeling better”, there are some bacteria which survive the initial dosage
and live on to reproduce other bacteria with the same traits.
Other people feel that penicillin is too readily prescribed, and this allows for
more bacteria to become immune to it.Because of the bacterial resistance,
scientists are continually looking for new sources for antibiotics as well as
changing the old chemical structures.
REFERENCES
BOOKS
• MICROBIOLOGY BY PELCHZAR
SITES
• en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penicillium_chrysogenum
• bioweb.uwlax.edu/bio203/s2008/kitzmann_step/
• www.britannica.com/EBchecked/.../Penicillium-chrysogenum
• mic.sgmjournals.org/cgi/reprint/123/2/281.pdf
• pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bi00514a002