Produktbild: High Value Fermentation Products, Volume 1

High Value Fermentation Products, Volume 1 Human Health

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

09.04.2019

Herausgeber

Saurabh Saran + weitere

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

480

Maße (L/B/H)

26/18.3/3 cm

Gewicht

1088 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-46001-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

09.04.2019

Herausgeber

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

480

Maße (L/B/H)

26/18.3/3 cm

Gewicht

1088 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-46001-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: High Value Fermentation Products, Volume 1
  • Foreword xvii

    About the Editors xix

    List of Contributors xxi

    Preface xxv

    Acknowledgement xxvii

    1 Introduction, Scope and Significance of Fermentation Technology 1
    Saurabh Saran, Alok Malaviya and Asha Chaubey

    1.1 Introduction 1

    1.2 Background of Fermentation Technology 2

    1.3 Market of Fermentation Products 3

    1.4 Types of Fermentation 4

    1.4.1 Solid State Fermentation (SSF) 4

    1.4.2 Submerged Fermentation (SmF) 7

    1.4.3 Solid State (SSF) vs. Submerged (SmF) Fermentation 9

    1.5 Classification of Fermentation 9

    1.6 Design and Parts of Fermentors 10

    1.7 Types of Fermentor 15

    1.7.1 Stirred Tank Fermentor 15

    1.7.2 Airlift Fermentor 16

    1.7.3 Bubble Column Fermentor 17

    1.7.4 Fluidized Bed Fermentor 18

    1.7.5 Packed Bed Fermentor 19

    1.7.6 Photo Bioreactor 19

    1.8 Industrial Applications of Fermentation Technology 21

    1.9 Scope and Global Market of Fermentation Technology 22

    1.10 Conclusions 23

    References 24

    2 Extraction of Bioactive Molecules through Fermentation and Enzymatic Assisted Technologies 27
    Ramón Larios-Cruz, Liliana Londoño-Hernández, Ricardo Gómez-García, Ivanoe García, Leonardo Sepulveda, Raúl Rodríguez-Herrera and Cristóbal N. Aguilar

    2.1 Introduction 27

    2.2 Definition of Bioactives Compounds 29

    2.2.1 Polyphenols and Polypeptides 29

    2.2.2 Importance and Applications of Bioactive Compounds 29

    2.2.3 Bioactive Peptides 31

    2.3 Traditional Processes for Obtaining Bioactive Compounds 33

    2.3.1 Soxhlet Extraction 33

    2.3.2 Liquid-Liquid and Solid-Liquid Extraction 34

    2.3.3 Maceration Extraction 35

    2.4 Fermentation and Enzymatic Technologies for Obtaining Bioactive Compounds 35

    2.4.1 Soft Chemistry in Bioactive Compounds 35

    2.4.2 Biotransformation of Bioactive Compounds 36

    2.4.3 Enzymatic and Fermentation Technologies 39

    2.5 Use of Agroindustrial Waste in the Fermentation Process 45

    2.5.1 Cereal Wastes 46

    2.5.2 Fruit and Plant Waste 46

    2.6 General Parameters in the Optimization of Fermentation Processes 49

    2.6.1 Response Surface Methodology 49

    2.6.2 First-Order Model 49

    2.6.3 Second-Order Model 49

    2.7 Final Comments 52

    Acknowledgements 52

    References 52

    3 Antibiotics Against Gram Positive Bacteria 61
    Rahul Vikram Singh, Hitesh Sharma, Anshela Koul and Vikash Babu

    3.1 Introduction 61

    3.2 Target of Antibiotics Against Gram Positive Bacteria 64

    3.2.1 Cell Wall Synthesis Inhibition 65

    3.2.2 Protein Synthesis Inhibition 70

    3.2.3 DNA Synthesis Inhibition 72

    3.3 Antibiotics Production Processes 72

    3.4 Conclusion 75

    References 76

    4 Antibiotic Against Gram-Negative Bacteria 79
    Maryam Faiyaz, Shikha Gupta and Divya Gupta

    4.1 Introduction 79

    4.2 Gram-Negative Bacteria and Antibiotics 80

    4.2.1 ss-Lactam Drugs 81

    4.2.2 Macrolide 82

    4.2.3 Aminoglycosides 84

    4.2.4 Fluoroquinolones 84

    4.3 Production of Antibiotics 85

    4.3.1 Strain Development 85

    4.3.2 Media Formulation and Optimization 88

    4.3.3 Fermentation 90

    4.3.4 Downstream Processing and Purification 92

    4.3.5 Quality Control 95

    4.4 Conclusion 95

    References 96

    5 Role of Antifungal Drugs in Combating Invasive Fungal Diseases 103
    Kakoli Dutt

    5.1 Introduction 103

    5.2 Antifungal Agents 105

    5.2.1 Azoles 114

    5.2.2 Polyenes 115

    5.2.3 Allylamine/Thiocarbonates 116

    5.2.4 Other Antifungal Agents 117

    5.3 Targets of Antifungal Agents 120

    5.3.1 Cell Wall Biosynthesis Inhibitors 120

    5.3.2 Sphingolipid Synthesis Inhibitors 123

    5.3.3 Ergosterol Synthesis Inhibitors 125

    5.3.4 Protein Synthesis Inhibitors 126

    5.3.5 Novel Targets 128

    5.4 Development of Resistance towards Antifungal Agents 130

    5.4.1 Minimum Inhibitory Concentration 130

    5.4.2 Antifungal-Drug-Resistance Mechanisms 131

    5.5 Market and Drug Development 134

    5.6 Conclusions 136

    Acknowledgement 137

    References 137

    6 Current Update on Rapamycin Production and Its Potential Clinical Implications 145
    Girijesh K. Patel, Ruchika Goyal1 and Syed M. Waheed

    6.1 Introduction 145

    6.2 Biosynthesis of Rapamycin 146

    6.2.1 Microbial Strain 147

    6.2.2 Optimization of Carbon, Nitrogen Sources and Salts 147

    6.2.3 Strain Manipulation to Improve Rapamycin Production 148

    6.3 Organic Synthesis of Rapamycin 152

    6.4 Extraction and Quantification of Rapamycin 152

    6.5 Physiological Factors Affecting Rapamycin Biosynthesis 153

    6.5.1 Effect of Media Components 153

    6.5.2 Effect of pH on Rapamycin Production 153

    6.5.3 Effect of Physical Gravity 154

    6.5.4 Effect of Morphological Changes 154

    6.5.5 Effect of Dissolved Oxygen (DO) and Carbon Dioxide (DCO2) 154

    6.6 Production of Rapamycin Analogs 154

    6.7 Mechanism of Action of Rapamycin 155

    6.8 Use of Rapamycin in Medicine 157

    6.8.1 Anti-Fungal Agent 157

    6.8.2 Immunosuppression 158

    6.8.3 Anti-Cancer Agent 158

    6.8.4 Anti-Aging Agent 158

    6.8.5 Role in HIV Treatment 158

    6.8.6 Rheumatoid Arthritis 159

    6.9 Side Effects of Long-term Use of Rapamycin 159

    6.10 Conclusions 159

    Acknowledgements 160

    References 160

    7 Advances in Production of Therapeutic Monoclonal Antibodies 165
    Richi V Mahajan, Subhash Chand, Mahendra Pal Singh, Apurwa Kestwal and Surinder Singh

    7.1 Introduction 165

    7.2 Discovery and Clinical Development 166

    7.3 Structure and Classification 167

    7.4 Nomenclature of Monoclonal Antibodies 168

    7.5 Production of Monoclonal Antibodies 170

    7.5.1 Hybridoma Technology 170

    7.5.2 Epstein-Barr Virus Technology 172

    7.5.3 Phage Display Technology 172

    7.5.4 Cell Line Based Production Techniques 173

    7.5.5 Chemical Modifications of Monoclonal Antibodies 183

    7.5.6 Advances in Antibody Technology 183

    7.6 Conclusions 185

    References 186

    8 Antimicrobial Peptides from Bacterial Origin: Potential Alternative to Conventional Antibiotics 193
    Lipsy Chopra, Gurdeep Singh, Ramita Taggar, Akanksha Dwivedi, Jitender Nandal, Pradeep Kumar and Debendra K. Sahoo

    8.1 Introduction 193

    8.2 Classification of Bacteriocins 194

    8.2.1 Bacteriocins from Gram-Negative Bacteria 194

    8.2.2 Bacteriocins from Gram-Positive Bacteria 194

    8.3 Mode of Action 196

    8.3.1 Pore-Forming Bacteriocins 196

    8.3.2 Non-Pore-Forming Bacteriocins: Intracellular Targets 198

    8.4 Applications 198

    8.4.1 Food Bio Preservative 198

    8.4.2 Food Packaging (In Packaging Films) 198

    8.4.3 Hurdle Technology to Enhance Food Safety 199

    8.4.4 Therapeutic Potential 200

    8.4.5 Effect of Bacteriocins on Biofilms 200

    8.5 Conclusions 202

    Acknowledgments 202

    Abbreviations 202

    References 202

    9 Non-Ribosomal Peptide Synthetases: Nature's Indispensable Drug Factories 205
    Richa Sharma, Ravi S. Manhas and Asha Chaubey

    9.1 Introduction 205

    9.1.1 Non-Ribosomal Peptides as Natural Products 205

    9.1.2 Non-Ribosomal Peptides as Drugs 206

    9.2 NRPS Machinery 208

    9.3 Catalytic Domains of NRPSs 208

    9.3.1 Adenylation (A) Domains 208

    9.3.2 Thiolation (T) or PCP Domains 209

    9.3.3 Condensation (C) Domains 209

    9.3.4 Thioesterase (Te) Domains 209

    9.4 Types of NRPS 210

    9.4.1 Type A (Linear NRPS) 210

    9.4.2 Type B (Iterative NRPS) 210

    9.4.3 Type C (Non-linear NRPS) 210

    9.5 Working of NRPSs 210

    9.5.1 Priming Thiolation Domain of NRPS 211

    9.5.2 Substrate Recognition and Activation 211

    9.5.3 Peptide Bond Formation between NRP Monomers 211

    9.5.4 Chain Termination of NRP Synthesis 212

    9.5.5 NRP Tailoring 212

    9.6 Sources of NRPs 213

    9.7 Production of Non-Ribosomal Peptides 216

    9.8 Future Scope 218

    Acknowledgements 219

    References 219

    10 Enzymes as Therapeutic Agents in Human Disease Management 225
    Babbal, Adivitiya, Shilpa Mohanty and Yogender Pal Khasa

    10.1 Introduction 225

    10.2 Pancreatic Enzymes 230

    10.2.1 Trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) 230

    10.2.2 Pancreatic Lipase (EC 3.1.1.3) 231

    10.2.3 Amylases (EC 3.2.1.1) 231

    10.3 Oncolytic Enzymes 232

    10.3.1 L-Asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1) 232

    10.3.2 L-Glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) 233

    10.3.3 Arginine Deiminase (ADI) (EC 3.5.3.6) 233

    10.4 Antidiabetic Enzymes 234

    10.4.1 Glucokinase (EC2.7.1.1)

    10.5 Liver Enzymes 235

    10.5.1 Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) (EC 1.15.1.1) 235

    10.5.2 Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) (EC 3.1.3.1) 236

    10.6 Kidney Disorder 237

    10.6.1 Uricase (EC 1.7.3.3) 237

    10.6.2 Urease (EC 3.5.1.5) 238

    10.7 DNA- and RNA-Based Enzymes 238

    10.7.1 Dornase 239

    10.7.2 Adenosine Deaminase 240

    10.7.3 Ribonuclease 240

    10.8 Enzymes for the Treatment of Cardiovascular Disorders 241

    10.8.1 The Hemostatic System 242

    10.8.2 Enzymes of the Hemostatic System 244

    10.9 Lysosomal Storage Disorders 251

    10.9.1 ¿-Galactosidase A (EC 3.2.1.22) 251

    10.9.2 Glucocerebrosidase (EC 3.2.1.45) 252

    10.9.3 Acid Alpha-Glucosidase (GAA) (EC 3.2.1.20) 253

    10.9.4 ¿-L-iduronidase (Laronidase) (EC 3.2.1.76) 253

    10.10 Miscellaneous Enzymes 254

    10.10.1 Phenylalanine Hydroxylase (EC 1.14.16.1) 254

    10.10.2 Collagenase (EC 3.4.24.3) 255

    10.10.3 Hyaluronidase 256

    10.10.4 Bromelain 256

    10.11 Conclusions 256

    References 257

    11 Erythritol: A Sugar Substitute 265
    Kanti N. Mihooliya, Jitender Nandal, Himanshu Verma and Debendra K. Sahoo

    11.1 Introduction 265

    11.1.1 Background of Erythritol 265

    11.1.2 History of Erythritol 268

    11.1.3 Occurrence of Erythritol 268

    11.1.4 General Characteristics 268

    11.2 Chemical and Physical Properties of Erythritol 271

    11.3 Estimation of Erythritol 271

    11.3.1 Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC) 273

    11.3.2 Colorimetric Assay for Detection of Polyols 273

    11.3.3 High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) 273

    11.3.4 Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) 273

    11.4 Production Methods for Erythritol 274

    11.4.1 Chemical Methods for Erythritol Production 274

    11.4.2 Fermentative Methods for Erythritol Production 274

    11.5 Optimization of Erythritol Production 275

    11.5.1 One Factor at a Time 276

    11.5.2 Statistical Design Approaches 277

    11.6 Toxicology of Erythritol 277

    11.7 Applications of Erythritol 277

    11.7.1 Confectioneries 278

    11.7.2 Bakery 279

    11.7.3 Pharmaceuticals 279

    11.7.4 Cosmetics 279

    11.7.5 Beverages 279

    11.8 Precautions for Erythritol Usage 279

    11.9 Global Market for Erythritol 280

    11.10 Conclusions 280

    References 281

    12 Sugar and Sugar Alcohols: Xylitol 285
    Bhumica Agarwal and Lalit Kumar Singh

    12.1 Introduction 285

    12.1.1 Lignocellulosic Biomass 286

    12.1.2 Properties of Xylitol 287

    12.1.3 Occurrence and Production of Xylitol 289

    12.2 Biomass Conversion Process 289

    12.2.1 Pretreatment Methodologies 289

    12.2.2 Enzymatic Hydrolysis 292

    12.2.3 Detoxification Techniques 293

    12.3 Utilization of Xylose 296

    12.3.1 Microorganisms Utilizing Xylose 296

    12.3.2 Metabolism of Xylose 297

    12.4 Process Variables 299

    12.4.1 Temperature and pH 299

    12.4.2 Substrate Concentration 300

    12.4.3 Aeration 301

    References 303

    13 Trehalose: An Anonymity Turns Into Necessity 309
    Manali Datta and Dignya Desai

    13.1 Introduction 309

    13.2 Trehalose Metabolism Pathways 310

    13.3 Physicochemical Properties and its Biological Significance 311

    13.4 Trehalose Production 312

    13.4.1 Enzymatic Conversion to Trehalose 312

    13.4.2 Microbe Mediated Fermentation 314

    13.4.3 Purification and Detection of Trehalose in Fermentation Process 316

    13.5 Application of Trehalose 317

    13.5.1 Role of Trehalose in Food Industries 317

    13.5.2 Role of Trehalose in Cosmetics and Pharmaceutics 318

    13.6 Conclusions 319

    References 320

    14 Production of Yeast Derived Microsomal Human CYP450 Enzymes (Sacchrosomes) in High Yields, and Activities Superior to Commercially Available Microsomal Enzymes 323
    Ibidapo Stephen Williams and Bhabatosh Chaudhuri

    14.1 Introduction 323

    14.1.1 Cytochrome P450 (CYP) Enzymes in Humans 323

    14.1.2 Human Cytochrome P450 Enzymes and their Role in Drug Metabolism 324

    14.1.3 Requirement of Activating Proteins to Form Functional Human CYP Enzymes 325

    14.1.4 Use of Yeast Biased Codons for the Syntheses of Human Cytochrome P450 Genes 325

    14.1.5 Expression of Human CYP Genes in Baker's Yeast from an Episomal Plasmid 325

    14.1.6 Expression of Human CYP Genes in Baker's Yeast from Integrative Plasmids 327

    14.1.7 The ADH2 Promoter for Production of Human CYP Enzymes in Baker's Yeast 327

    14.1.8 Growth of Yeast Cells Containing Integrated Copies of CYP Gene Expression Cassettes, Driven by the ADH2 Promoter, for Production of CYP Enzymes 328

    14.2 Amounts of Microsomal CYP Enzyme Isolated from Yeast Strains Containing Chromosomally Integrated CYP Gene Expression Cassettes are far Higher than Strains Harbouring an Episomal Expression Plasmid Encoding a CYP Gene 328

    14.2.1 Preparation of Microsomal CYP Enzymes 328

    14.2.2 Measurement of the Amounts of Functional CYPs in Microsomes Isolated from Baker's Yeast 329

    14.2.3 Production of Functional Human CYP1A2 Microsomal Enzyme from Baker's Yeast 330

    14.2.4 Production of Functional Human CYP3A4 Microsomal Enzyme from Baker's Yeast 330

    14.2.5 Production of Functional Human CYP2D6 Microsomal Enzyme from Baker's Yeast 331

    14.2.6 Production of Functional Human CYP2C19 Microsomal Enzyme from Baker's Yeast 332

    14.2.7 Production of Functional Human CYP2C9 Microsomal Enzyme from Baker's Yeast 333

    14.2.8 Production of Functional Human CYP2E1 Microsomal Enzyme from Baker's Yeast 333

    14.2.9 Comments on the Production of Human CYP Enzymes from Baker's Yeast 334

    14.3 Comparison of CYP Enzyme Activity of Yeast-Derived Microsomes (Sacchrosomes) with Commercially Available Microsomes Isolated from Insect and Bacterial Cells 336

    14.3.1 Fluorescence-based Assays for Determining CYP Enzyme Activities in Isolated Microsomes 336

    14.3.2 Comparison of Enzyme Activity of CYP1A2 Sacchrosomes with Commercially Available CYP1A2 Microsomes Isolated from Insect and Bacterial Cells 336

    14.3.3 Comparison of Enzyme Activity of CYP2C9 Sacchrosomes with Those of Commercially Available CYP2C9 Microsomes from Insect and Bacterial Cells 337

    14.3.4 Comparison of Enzyme Activity of CYP2C19 Sacchrosomes with Those of Commercially Available CYP2C19 Microsomes from Insect and Bacterial Cells 337

    14.3.5 Comparison of Enzyme Activity of CYP2D6 Sacchrosomes with Those of Commercially Available CYP2D6 Microsomes from Insect and Bacterial Cells 338

    14.3.6 Comparison of Enzyme Activity of CYP3A4 Sacchrosomes with Those of Commercially Available CYP3A4 Microsomes from Insect and Bacterial Cells 338

    14.3.7 Comparison of Enzyme Activity of CYP2E1 Sacchrosomes with One of the Commercial CYP2E1 Microsomes Available from Insect Cells 339

    14.4 IC50 Values of Known CYP Inhibitors Using Sacchrosomes, Commercial Enzymes and HLMs 339

    14.5 Stabilisation of Sacchrosomes through Freeze-drying 340

    14.6 Conclusions 342

    References 345

    15 Artemisinin: A Potent Antimalarial Drug 347
    Alok Malaviya, Karan Malhotra, Anil Agarwal and Katherine Saikia

    15.1 Introduction 347

    15.2 Biosynthesis of Artemisinin in Artemisia annua and Pathways Involved 348

    15.3 Yield Enhancement Strategies in A. annua 351

    15.4 Artemisinin Production Using Heterologous Hosts 352

    15.4.1 Microbial Engineering 352

    15.4.2 Plant Metabolic Engineering 353

    15.5 Spread of Artemisinin Resistance 357

    15.6 Challenges in Large-Scale Production 358

    15.7 Future Prospects 360

    References 360

    16 Microbial Production of Flavonoids: Engineering Strategies for Improved Production 365
    Aravind Madhavan, Raveendran Sindhu, KB Arun, Ashok Pandey, Parameswaran Binod and Edgard Gnansounou

    16.1 Introduction 365

    16.2 Flavonoids 366

    16.3 Flavonoid Chemistry and Classes 366

    16.4 Health Benefits of Flavonoids 367

    16.5 Flavonoid Biosynthesis in Microorganism 368

    16.6 Engineering of Flavonoid Biosynthesis Pathway 370

    16.7 Metabolic Engineering Strategies 370

    16.8 Applications of Synthetic Biology in Flavonoid Production 371

    16.9 Post-modification of Flavonoids 374

    16.10 Purification of Flavonoids 374

    16.11 Conclusion 375

    Acknowledgements 375

    References 376

    17 Astaxanthin: Current Advances in Metabolic Engineering of the Carotenoid 381
    Manmeet Ahuja, Jayesh Varavadekar, Mansi Vora, Piyush Sethia, Harikrishna Reddy and Vidhya Rangaswamy

    17.1 Introduction 381

    17.1.1 Structure of Astaxanthin 382

    17.1.2 Natural vs. Synthetic Astaxanthin 382

    17.1.3 Uses and Market of Astaxanthin 383

    17.2 Pathway of Astaxanthin 384

    17.2.1 Bacteria 384

    17.2.2 Algae 384

    17.2.3 Yeast 385

    17.2.4 Plants 386

    17.3 Challenges/Current State of the Art in Fermentation/Commercial Production 386

    17.4 Metabolic Engineering for Astaxanthin 388

    17.4.1 Bacteria 388

    17.4.2 Plants 390

    17.4.3 Synechocystis 391

    17.4.4 Algae 391

    17.4.5 Yeast 392

    17.5 Future Prospects 393

    References 395

    18 Exploitation of Fungal Endophytes as Bio-factories for Production of Functional Metabolites through Metabolic Engineering; Emphasizing on Taxol Production 401
    Sanjog Garyali, Puja Tandon, M. Sudhakara Reddy and Yong Wang

    18.1 Introduction 401

    18.2 Taxol: History and Clinical Impact 403

    18.3 Endophytes 403

    18.3.1 Biodiversity of Endophytes 405

    18.3.2 Endophyte vs. Host Plant: the Relationship 405

    18.4 The Plausibility of Horizontal Gene Transfer (HGT) Hypothesis 407

    18.5 Endophytes as Biological Factories of Functional Metabolites 409

    18.6 Taxol Producing Endophytic Fungi 410

    18.7 Molecular Basis of Taxol Production by Taxus Plants (Taxol Biosynthetic Pathway) 412

    18.8 Metabolic Engineering for Synthesis of Taxol: Next Generation Tool 416

    18.8.1 Plant Cell Culture 417

    18.8.2 Microbial Metabolic Engineering for Synthesis of Taxol and Its Precursors 418

    18.8.3 Metabolic Engineering in Heterologous Plant for Synthesis of Taxol and Its Precursors 420

    18.9 Future Perspectives 421

    Acknowledgements 423

    References 423

    Index 431