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INDUSTRIAL MYCOLOGY

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MYCOLOGY (MIC 206) INDUSTRIAL MYCOLOGY FOOD AND BEVERAGES INDUSTRIES Food and Beverages Industry Brewer s yeast S. cerevisiae ferments sugars in cereal grains to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INDUSTRIAL MYCOLOGY


1
MYCOLOGY (MIC 206)
  • INDUSTRIAL MYCOLOGY

2
FOOD AND BEVERAGES INDUSTRIES
3
Food and Beverages Industry
  • Brewers yeast
  • S. cerevisiae ferments sugars in cereal grains
    to produce
  • alcohol
  • beers and lagers.
  • Citric acid
  • used in soft drinks, candies, artificial lemon
    juice, baked goods etc.
  • produced industrially by fungus fermentation
    using Aspergillus niger.
  • Minor fraction is produced by Yarrowia
    lipolytica.

4
Food and Beverages Industry
  • Soya sauce
  • used as condiments, colorouring and flavouring
    agents.
  • Aerobic fermentation involving Aspergillus oryzae
    or A. sojae.
  • Tempe
  • Involves fermentation of cooked whole or dehulled
    soya beans by Rhizopus species (R.oigosporus).
  • The resulting cake-like product can be cut into
    cubes and fried or cooked with other ingredients.

5
Baking Industry
  • Bakers yeast
  • S.cerevisiae) ferment sugars in the flour,
    releasing CO2.
  • ? makes bubbles in the dough and causes the
    dough to rise (increase in volume).
  • used in the leavening of bread and other baked
    products.
  • The alcohol produced evaporates during baking.
  • Cheese Ripening
  • The blue mould, Penicillium, is used in the
    ripening process to prepare speciality cheeses
    such as
  • blue cheeses e.g. Roquefort, Gorgonzola, Stilton
    etc.
  • soft cheeses such as Camembert and Brie.

6
Mycoprotein - Quorn
  • 1960s, mycoprotein was developed by Rank Hovis
    and McDougall.
  • 1986, manufactured and marketed under the name of
    Quorn by Marlow Foods Ltd (named after the area
    of its discovery).
  • extracted from a Fusarium venenatum.
  • Used as a health food and an alternative to meat.
  • found to be very nutritious, not least because it
    contains high quality protein and fibre, but is
    also low in fat.
  • leading brand of mycoprotein food product in the
    UK and Ireland.

7
MEDICINE
8
Antibiotics - Penicillin
  • discovered in 1929 by Sir Alexander Fleming, who
    observed inhibition of staphylococci on an agar
    plate contaminated by a Penicillium mold.
  • He noticed that a patch of the mold Penicillium
    notatum had grown on a plate containing the
    bacterium Staphylococcus and that around the mold
    there was a zone where no Staphylococcus could
    grow.
  • After more research, he was able to show that
    culture broth of the mold prevented growth of the
    Staphylococcus even when diluted up to 800 times.
  • He named the active substance penicillin but was
    unable to isolate it.

9
Antibiotics - Penicillin
  • Other examples of antibiotics derived from fungi
  • Cephalosporin (Cephalosporium sp).
  • Griseofulvin (Penicillium griseofulvum and
    Penicillium patulum).

10
Statins
  • Statins (or HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors) are a
    class of drugs used to lower cholesterol levels .
  • Are products of metabolic reactions in fungi.
  • Lovastatin Aspergillus terreus strains.
  • Mevastatin Penicillium citrinum.
  • Functions inhibit an enzyme HMG-CoA reductase,
    which plays a central role in the production of
    cholesterol in the liver.
  • involved in the synthesis of cholesterol levels
    in cardiovascular (CVD) patients.

11
Immuno-suppressives
  • Immune suppressants are essential for organ
    transplant patients.
  • The T cells of the human immune system recognise
    the new organ as foreign and began to destroy
    the organ.
  • Cyclosporin A, produced by Tolypocladium inflatum
    (Filamentous fungus).
  • This drugs prevents organ rejection by inhibiting
    T-cell activation.

12
Vitamins
  • All fungi are a good source of vitamins.
  • Ex Brewers Yeast (synthesized B group
    vitamins).
  • In industry, Fungi Nematospora gossypii and
    Eremothecium ashbyi used to produced B-
    vitamins.

13
ENERGY PRODUCTION
An endophytic fungi, that lives within a plant,
churns out mycodiesel.
14
Mycodiesel
  • volatile organic products made by fungi that have
    fuel potential.
  • The latest discovery is that of an endophytic
    Hypoxylon/Nodulosporium species, or one that
    lives within a plant, that makes the compound
    cineole along with a number of other cyclohexanes
    (colorless, flammable liquids found in petroleum
    crude oil and volcanic gases) and compounds with
    enormous fuel potential.
  • Cineole is of special interest since it has been
    shown that it can be added to gasoline at a ratio
    of 8 parts cineole to 1 part of gasoline, ending
    up with a final octane rating of 95.

15
CROP IMPROVEMENT
16
Crop Improvement
  • The most important fungi in crop production is
    Mycorrhizal.
  • Form symbiotic relationship with the legumious
    plant.

17
Image of mycorr greenhouse
18
Preparing the mycelium for seed inoculation at
the University of Namibia
19
Ideal houses for mycelium and mushroom growth
Namibia
20
Mycelium development fruiting bodies
21
WASTE TREATMENT
22
Fungi in Waste Treatment
  • Fungi such as Aspergillus niger and Chaetomium
    cupreum have also been used to reduce the content
    of highly toxic tannins in tannery effluents.
  • Penicillium sp. can also be used to coagulate
    bread yeast suspensions, and to degrade heavily
    coloured olive oil effluents to low molecular
    weight polyphenols.
  • Aspergillus oryzae remove the highly coloured
    product melanoidin from liquid molasses wastes
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