Introduction To Fermentation Processes
Introduction To Fermentation Processes
Processes
1.1 Historical Highlights of Fermentation Processes
By 2012, industrial Microbiology touched the major sectors that define human
activity: food, fuel, and health. The history of biotechnology starts with bread-
making, utilizing yeast, about 8000 years ago (Table 1.1). Fermentation of grains
and fruits to alcoholic beverages was carried out in Egypt and other parts of the
ancient world in about 2500 bc. Other types of food fermentation practiced for
thousands of years include the transformation of milk into cheeses and fermentation
of soybeans. However, it was not until 1857 that Pasteur proved that alcoholic
fermentation was caused by living cells, namely, yeasts. In the ensuing 100 years,
the intentional manipulation of microbial fermentations to obtain food products,
solvents, and beverages, and later, substances having therapeutic value as
antibiotics gave rise to a large fermentation industr.
The birth of Microbial Biotechnology or Industrial Microbiology largely began with the
studies of Pasteur. In 1857 he finally demonstrated beyond doubt that alcoholic
fermentation in beer and wine production was the result of microbial activity,
rather than being a chemical process. Pasteur also noted that certain organisms
could spoil beer and wine, and that some fermentations were aerobic, whereas
others were anaerobic. He went on to devise the process of pasteurization, a major
contribution to food and beverage preservation, which was originally developed to
preserve wine. In fact, many of the early advances of both pure and applied
microbiology were through studies on beer brewing and wine making. Pasteur’s
publications and others were important catalysts for the progress of industrial
fermentation processes.
Of the further advances that followed, none were more important than the
development of pure culture techniques by Hansen at the Carlsberg Brewery in
Denmark. Pure strain brewing was carried out here for the first time in 1883, using a
1
yeast isolated by Hansen, referred to as Carlsberg Yeast No. 1 (Saccharomyces
carlsbergensis, now classified as a strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae).
During the early part of the 20 th century, further progress in this field was relatively
slow. Around the turn of the century there had been major advancements in the
large-scale treatment of sewage, enabling significant improvement of public health
in urban communities.
In the early 1920s an industrial fermentation process was also introduced for the
manufacture of citric acid, employing a filamentous fungus (mould), Aspergillus
niger.
More recent progress includes the ability to produce monoclonal antibodies for
analytical, diagnostic, therapeutic and purification purposes, pioneered by Milstein
and Kohler in the early 1970s.
However, many of the greatest advances have followed the massive developments in
genetic engineering (recombinant DNA technology) over the last 20 years. This
technology has had, and will continue to have, a tremendous influence on traditional,
established and novel fermentation processes and products. It allows genes to be
transferred from one organism to another and allows new approaches to strain
improvement. The basis of gene transfer is the insertion of a specific gene sequence
from a donor organism, via an expression vector, into a suitable host. Hosts for
expression vectors can be prokaryotes such as the bacterium Escherichia coli;
alternatively, where post-translational processing is required, as with some human
proteins, a eukaryotic host is usually required, e.g., a yeast.
2
1.2 Fermentation Processes
1.2.1 Definition of Fermentation
The term 'fermentation' is derived from the Latin verb ‘fervere’ to ‘boil’, thus
describing the appearance of the action of yeast on extracts of fruit or malted grain.
The boiling appearance is due to the production of carbon dioxide bubbles caused by
the anaerobic catabolism of the sugar present in the extract. However, fermentation
has come to have different meanings to biochemists and to industrial microbiologists.
Its biochemical meaning relates to the generation of energy by the catabolism of
organic compounds, whereas its meaning in industrial microbiology tends to be much
broader.
The production of alcohol by the action of yeast on malt or fruit extracts has been
carried out on a large scale for very many years and was the first 'industrial' process
for the production of a microbial metabolite. Thus, industrial microbiologists have
extended the term fermentation to describe any process for the production of
product by the mass culture of a microorganism. Brewing and the production of
organic solvents may be described as fermentations in both senses of the word but
the description of an aerobic process as a fermentation is obviously using the term in
the broader, microbiological context.
3
3. The production of an active, pure culture in sufficient quantity to inoculate the
production vessel.
4. The growth of the organism in the production fermenter under optimum
conditions for product formation.
5. The extraction of the product and its purification.
6. The disposal of effluents produced by the process.
4
Some microbial products are primary metabolites, produced during active growth
(the trophophase), which include amino acids, organic acids, vitamins and
industrial solvents such as alcohols and acetone. However, many of the most
important industrial products are secondary metabolites, which are not essential for
growth, e.g. alkaloids and antibiotics. These compounds are produced in the
stationary phase of a batch culture, after microbial biomass production has peaked
(the idiophase).
5
Fermentations are performed in large fermenters often with capacities of several
thousand litres. These range from simple tanks, which may be stirred or unstirred, to
complex integrated systems involving varying levels of computer control. The
fermenter and associated pipe-work, etc., must be constructed of materials, usually
stainless steel, that can be repeatedly sterilized and that will not react adversely with
the microorganisms or with the target products. The mode of fermenter operation
(batch, fed-batch or continuous systems), the method of its aeration and agitation,
where necessary, and the approach taken to process scale-up have major influences
on fermentation performance.
DSP will usually involve more than one stage. Downstream processing costs (as
approximate proportions of selling prices) of fermentation products vary
considerably, e.g., with yeast biomass, penicillin G and certain enzymes, processing
costs as percentages of selling prices are 20%, 20–30% and 60–70% respectively.
6
effective killing of microorganisms and spores that might be found in the flask or
nutrient solution.
Figure 1.2: Schematic diagram of incubator-shaker used for shake flask culture of
microbial cells.
The temperature range over which many types of organisms will grow are relatively
narrow and will typically fall within 20–60°C and at atmospheric pressure.
Microorganisms that are psychotrophs require lower temperatures, while
archaebacteria (Archaea) require higher temperatures (up to 90°C) and sometimes,
elevated pressure to grow. In this case, special incubation chambers are needed. The
circulation of air in the incubator also serves to remove heat of fermentation. The
oxygen requirements for aerobic microorganisms are met by the swirling action of
the shake fl ask, accompanied by diffusion of air through the porous, sterile, cotton
plug that is fitted on top of the flask.
The culturing of strict anaerobes [i.e., microorganisms that are killed by oxygen in
the ppb (parts per billion) range] requires that inoculation of the microorganism be
carried out in a special hood, known as an anaerobic chamber, so that oxygen is
excluded and prevents oxygen from dissolving in the broth. This enclosed chamber
7
resembles a glove-box. Traces of oxygen are scavenged from the N 2 gas by passing
the gas over hot (200–300°C) copper filings that react with trace oxygen to form
copper oxides, and this oxygen-free nitrogen is used to fill the chamber.
At the laboratory, scale, the entire vessel, including head-plates and fermentation
media, can be placed into an autoclave for sterilization. Such a fermenter contains
sealed ports for pH and O2 probes, as well as ports for addition of acid or base for
purposes of pH control. Aeration of the fermentation broth is carried out by bubbling
compressed air that has been sterile-filtered through a 0.2-µm filter, into the bottom
of the vessel. The 0.2-µm cutoff of such a filter is small enough to block any airborne
spores or microorganisms from entering the fermenter with the air. Ports enable
samples to be taken for intermittent analysis by chromatography, mass
spectroscopy, or other methods. These data are then used to generate graphs of the
fermentation time-course. Heating and cooling of the fermenter is achieved by
passing thermostat water through the cooling coil (i.e., hollow baffle) or a jacket.
Unlike a chemical reactor, a biological reactor contains living entities that respond to
externally applied changes in their environment by generating new reaction
8
pathways, new enzymes, and new products. These changes are propagated and
copied through cell division in a manner that is neither possible nor observed in
chemical reactors that contained a fixed amount of a defined catalyst.
Fermentation products can be broadly divided into two categories: (i) high volume,
low value products, or (ii) low volume, high value products. Examples of the first
category include most food and beverage fermentation products, whereas many fine
chemicals and pharmaceuticals are in the latter category.
Several organic acids derived from microbial action are employed in food
manufacture and for a wide range of other purposes. The first human use was for
acetic acid, as vinegar, produced as a result of the oxidation of alcoholic beverages
by acetic acid bacteria. A further aerobic fermentation involves citric acid
production by the filamentous fungus, Aspergillus niger, which has become a major
industrial fermentation product, as it has numerous food and non-food applications.
Also, most of the amino acids and vitamins used as supplements in human food
and animal feed are produced most economically by microorganisms, particularly if
high-yielding over-producing strains are developed. In addition, some
microorganisms contain high levels of protein with good nutritional characteristics
9
suitable for both human and animal consumption. This so-called ‘single-cell
protein’ (SCP) can be produced from a wide range of microorganisms cultivated on
low-cost carbon sources.
10
Immobilization of enzymes or whole cells, by their attachment to inert polymeric
supports, allows easier recovery and reuse of the biocatalyst, and some enzymes are
much more stable in this form. Also, the product does not become contaminated with
the enzyme. Applications of immobilized biological catalysts include the production of
amino acids, organic acids and sugar syrups.
Fossil fuels, especially oil, are likely to become exhausted within the next 50–100
years, resulting in the need to develop alternative sources of energy. Biological fuel
generation may make an increasing contribution, particularly in the conversion of
renewable plant biomass to liquid and gaseous fuels. This plant biomass can be in
the form of cultivated energy crops, natural vegetation, and agricultural, industrial
and domestic organic wastes. Currently, methane and ethanol are the main
products, although other potential fuels can be generated using microorganisms,
including hydrogen, ethane, propane and butanol.
11
Microbial-based ‘clean technology’ is also being increasingly used in the
desulphurization of fuels and the leaching of metals (e.g., copper, iron, uranium
and zinc) from low-grade mineral ores and wastes using species of Thiobacillus and
Sulfolobus. Environmental biological control is a further area where microorganisms
are employed in an effort to reduce our reliance on synthetic chemical pesticides.
Bacteria, fungi, protozoa and viruses are cultivated to produce biomass or cell
products for the biocontrol of fungal, insect and nematode pests of agricultural
crops, along with some vectors of human and animal diseases.
12