4. Media for Industrial Fermentation

Introduction

Design of Industrial Fermentation Media

Basic requirements

Water

Energy sources

Carbon / Nitrogen / Mineral Elements / Vitamin

Possible Oxygen for aerobes

Criteria for Media for Industrial Fermentation Process

1)  Maximum yield of product / biomass

2)  Maximum concentration of product / biomass

3)  Maximum rate of product formation

4)  Minimum yield of undesired products

5)  Consistent quality (through years)

6)  Minimal problem during media making and sterilization

7)  Minimal problem during product processing

(aeration / agitation / extraction / purification / waste treatment)

Carbon Sources:

Cane Molasses / Beet Molasses / Cereal Grains / Starch

Glucose / Sucrose / Lactose

Nitrogen Sources:

Ammonium salts / Urea / Nitrates / Corn Steep Liquor

Soya Bean Meal / Slaughter-House waste / Fermentation residue

Media Creation – “Cheap” based on Cost

However, pure substrates – simpler processes

Media – Variation of Fermenter Design / Process

Consideration of Media formulation at Lab / Pilot / Industrial Scale

Gas transfer limitation

Viscosity – power input

pH variation (gradient)

Forming problem

Oxidation – Reduction potential (gradient)

Morphological variation of organisms

Precursors / Metabolic Inhibitors

Product recovery / Effluent treatment

In complex natural materials

Batch variation in Components / Impurity

Unpredictable Biomass / Product yield

Undetectable small improvement of fermentation process

Product recovery-Purification / Effluent treatment – High BOD

In molasses – high forming / difficult pH control

So, Industrial process – Simpler substrates for better process

Development – specially recombinant proteins

Typical Media

Experimental Design but, not necessary for best performance (table)

Medium Formulation

Medium formulation for successful process development

Media – support energy requirement for

Cell growth / Biosynthesis / Cell maintenance

In Aerobic fermentation

Carbon / Energy Source + Nitrogen Source + O2 + Others

= Biomass + Product + CO2 + H2O + Heat

Equation – Economical Design

(for minimal waste generation)

Theoretical value for Biomass / Product formation

But, difficult in real fermentation

Elemental Composition

Microorganisms – Element balance equation

(C, H, N, S, P, Mg, Na, Ca and K) Cl(bacteria?)

In media – Phosphate as buffering

Trace Elements

(Fe, Zn, Cu, Mn, Co, Mo, B)

Other nutrients – Based on growth requirement / Biosynthesis capability

Amino acids / Vitamins / Nucleotides

Growth factors

Carbon source – as Dual roles

Energy generation (Cell growth + Maintenance)

Biosynthesis

Dry Mass Yield Coefficient =

(Cell Dry Mass)/(Carbon Utilization) (table)

Water

As a major component of all fermentation

As ancillary service – heating / cooling / cleaning / rinsing

Water – Minerals / Salts

Energy Sources

For growth

Energy by Oxidation / Light

Carbohydrates / Lipids / Proteins

Carbon Sources

Factors Influencing the Choice of Carbon Source

“Rate of Carbon Metabolism” – Biomass / Product formation

Fast growth rate – by rapid carbon metabolisms

Often lower secondary metabolites

Carbon catabolic regulation

Carbon sources – relationship to products

By dissimilation

As Major cost association

So, Industry – develop alternative carbon sources

Based on cost / geographical locations

Carbon sources – Impurity problem

Fe++ concentration

Carbon source – sterilization process

“Maileard reaction” – reducing sugar + Amino

“Gelatinization” of starch

Separate sterilization

Government regulation

Subsidization

Local Brand protection

Examples of Carbon Sources

Carbohydrates

Oils and Fats – Higher energy production

(2.4X than glucose)

Antifoam properties – better recovery

Hydrocarbons

Lower cost

Nitrogen Sources

Inorganic Vs. Organic sources of Nitrogen

Inorganic Nitrogen Sources

Ammonia / Ammonium salts / Nitrates

Organic Nitrogen Sources

Amino acids / Proteins / Urea

Protein Hydrolysate – Cheaper sources

High proteins containing wastes – complex medium

Corn-steep liquor

Seeds meals

Factors Influencing the Choice of Nitrogen Source

Nitrogen Regulations

Nitrate – conversion of nitrate to ammonium ion

“Nitrate reductase”

Ammonia repression on amino acid uptaking

pH control as Salts

pH buffering by phosphate – reducing antibiotic formation

Complex medium – may cause problem in recovery

Minerals

Essential for Growth / Metabolisms

Magnesium / Phosphorus / Potassium / Sulphur

Calcium / Chlorine as Addition

Cobalt / Copper / Iron / Manganese / Molybdeum / Zinc

As usually impurities of complex media

Product composition – require higher concentration

Phosphate – as pH controlling

Secondary metabolites formation

Mineral toxicity – Lower tolerance ranges

Manganese / Iron / Zinc – Critical for secondary metabolite

Insufficient Vs. Toxic for cell growth

Chelators

During sterilization – Precipitation of Insoluble metal phosphates

“Chelator” – prevent precipitation

EDTA / Citric acid / Polyphosphate

Formation of Complex formation with metals

Slower use of metal ions by Microoganisms

In industrial media

Complex ingredient – Yeast extract / Peptone

Complex with metal ions

Gradual release during growth

Growth Factors

Limiting synthesis of full components of cell components

Vitamins / Amino Acids / Fatty acids / Sterols as growth factors

Complex ingredients – usually sufficient supply

Calcium pantothenate / Biotin / Thiamine

Nutrient Recycle

In continuous culture – Cost reduction

Buffers

pH control – relation with Biomass / Product formation

Calcium Carbonate / Phosphate salts

Balances of carbon / Nitrogen sources

The Addition of Precursors and Metabolic Regulators to Medium

Precursors / Inhibitors / Inducers

Precursors – side chain modification (phenylalanine)

Inhibitors – Product formation / Metabolism rearrange

Inducers – Enzyme inducers

Oxygen Requiements

Controlling growth rate / Metabolic production

Oxygen availability

a.  Fast metabolism – higher oxygen demand

b.  Rheology – Media Viscosity by Individual components

c.  Antiform – surface active agents

Limiting oxygen transfer rate

Antifoams

“Foam” – mainly due to proteins in medium

Protein denaturing at air-broth interface

Foam cause cell removals – cause “autolysis”

Microbial proteins – worsen foaming problem

Foam – Physical / Biological problems

Exhausted gas circulation

Bubble size of air

Lower mass / heat transfer

Probe interference

Biological Consequence

Deposition of cells – wall formation

Sterilization problem – wet filter

Microbial infection

Siphoning – product loss

Foaming Patten in Fermentor

1.  Constant foam level

Initially Media, then M/O activity

2.  Steady falling foaming

Initially Media, no M/O acitivity

3.  Early falling foam, but rising foaming

Slight effect by Medium

Major foaming by M/O activity

4.  Lower initial foaming, then rising

Solely to M/O activity

5.  Complex foaming pattern

Combination of Medium & M/O

Foam Control

1.  Use Defined / Modification of Medium

pH / Temp / Aeration / Agitation

if medium components is major problem

2.  Antifoam – as Standard approach

3.  Use of Mechanical foam breaker

Antifoam – Surface agents

Destabilizing protein films by

Hydrophobic bridges between two surfaces

Displacement of absorbed protein

Rapid spreading on the surface of film

Ideal Antifoam Properties

1.  Rapid dispersion – fast action

2.  Active at lower concentration

3.  Long acting in preventing foam formation

4.  Not metabolized

5.  Non-toxic to M/O

6.  Non-toxic to human / animal

7.  Not causing problem in Extraction / Purification

8.  No Hazard in handling

9.  Cheap

10. No effect on oxygen transfer

11. Heat sterilizable

Some Industrial Antifoam

1.  Alcohols – longer fatty alcohols

2.  Esters

3.  Fatty acids

4.  Silicones

5.  Sulfonates

6.  Miscellaneous – Polymers

In Industry,

Foaming Control – as an “Empirical Art”

Medium Optimization

Classical Approach – Changing one independent variable

Nutrient / Antifoam / pH / Temp

But, factorial combination – expensive / time consuming

Alternative strategies

Statistical approach

Relationship between independent variables

Animal Tissue Culture Medium

~40% Unit cost

Serum - ~80% of medium cost

Serum – Containing 1000 components

But, all components is not required cell growth or cell differentiation

Should be free of bacterial / viral / BSE contamination

Serum-free media supplements

Components for cell growth / cell differentiation

1.  consistent / definable medium composition

2.  reduction of potential contamination

3.  potential cost saving

4.  Simplifying downstream processing – less protein

Serum replacements

Albumin / Insulin / Transferrin / Ethanolamine

Selenium / B-mercaptoethanol etc.

Protein-Free medium – Attractive objective

Trace Elements / Osmolality / pH buffering

Non-Nutritional media supplements

Sodium carboxy methyl cellulose – mechanical damage

Pluronic F-68 (polyglycol) – stirring / sparging


Chapter 5 Sterilization

If foreign microorganisms exist in Fermenter,

i) Medium supports both organisms – loss productivity

i) In Continuous fermentation – contaminant outgrowth

ii)  In single cell protein fermentation – a part of product

iii)  Contaminant products – difficult to recovery

iv)  Contaminant – product degradation

v)  Phage contamination – cell lysis

To avoid contamination

i) Using pure inoculum

ii)  Sterilizing the medium to be employed

iii)  Sterilizing the fermenter vessel

iv)  Sterilizing all materials to be added to the fermentation during process

v)  Maintaining aseptic conditions during the fermentation

Probability of contamination & the Nature of consequences

New procedure development – “Protected”

Medium – limited Microorganisms can grow

Medium – cell growth as selective force

(pH reduction as cell grows)

Beer fermentation

Hop resin – inhibition of M/O growth

Brewing – lowering pH

So, May not need to be sterilization

Medium Sterilization

Sterilization by Filtration / Radiation / Ultrasonic treatment

Chemical Treatment / Heat

But, Universal method for sterilization by “Steam”

A few animal cell cultures – filtration due “heat labile”

Steam sterilization

Kinetic of Microbial destruction

-dN/dt = kN (k= specific death rate)

Consideration of “Total number” not “concentration

Bacillus “Endospore” as “Reference”

As heat resistant nature of spores

“Bacillus stearothermophilus”

Media compositions

Fat / oil – less humidity

Longer sterilization time

During sterilization

Heat – Reduction of Nutritive quality

Initially “Cooking effect”

“availability of nutrition”

Heat detrimental effect on medium

1) Interaction between nutrient

components of medium

“ Maillard Reaction”

Reducing sugar + amino acids

Separate sterilization

2) Degradation of heat labile

components

Vitamins / Amino acids / Proteins

So, High Heat / Short time process for better results

Time / Temperature dependent of sterilization

Better destruction of M/O

Better preservation of Nutrients

Advantage of Continuous sterilization over Batch sterilization

1)  Superior maintenance of medium quality

2)  Ease scale-up

3)  Easier automation

4)  The reduction of surge capacity for stream

5)  The reduction of sterilization cycle time

6)  (Some) the reduction of fermentor corrosion

Advantage of Batch sterilization over continuous sterilization

1)  Lower capital investment

2)  Lower risk of contamination

3)  Easier manual control

4)  Easier control of high solid content medium

Continuous Sterilization – Using “Heat Exchanger”

1)  Possible failure of gaskets

2)  Particulate components – blocking

The Design of Batch Sterilization Process

Preferred by Industry because of easy operation

Sterility Vs. Minimum Nutrition damage

Batch sterilization at 121oC

Heating / Cooling period should be considered

Based on Temperature – Time Profile

Overall = Heating + Holding + Cooling

Nutritional damage

As scale-up increased, nutritional damage increased

By longer Heating / Cooling periods

Methods of Batch Sterilization

In situ Medium sterilization vs. Special Vessel (Mash cooker)

Sterilization vessel

1)  Saving time : Fermenter clean-up during sterilization

2)  High concentrated medium sterilization – smaller cooker (less heating / cooling time)

3)  Medium viscosity increased during sterilization

High power for sterilization vessel for multiple fermenters

4)  Less corrosion of fermenter at high temperature

But, disadvantage

1)  Capital cost

2)  Transfer line as inherent danger of contamination

3)  Mechanical failure – multiple fermenters affected

In Industry

Large scale – “longer “Down Time” of in situ fermentation

Continuous system is preferred

The Design of Continuous Sterilization Process

Time / Temperature dependent like Batch system

But, Higher temperature / Short time

Less heating / Cooling time

2 Heat exchangers – Heat / Cooling

Direct vs. Indirect Heat Exchangers

Direct heat exchanger – Steam Injector

Advantages

1)  short heating up time

2)  better suspended solid

3)  Lower capital invest

4)  Easy operation

5)  High efficiency of steam utilization

Disadvantages

1)  Forming

2)  Condense steam – Dilution

3)  “Clean Steam” due to corrosion

Cooling

Flash cooling through expansion valve to

steam chamber (Instant cooling)

Indirect Heat exchanger

Double-spiral type

Countercurrent stream

Holding coil – used steam for partial heat

Less contamination as use end-gaskets

Higher clearance for suspended solids

Plate heat exchanger

Countercurrent – Between gaskets

May cross-contamination as gasket failure

Higher capacity as additional plates

Combination of Direct / Indirect Heat Exchanger

Starch – Rapid heating by steam injection

Prevent gelatinization at pre-heating

Industrial Sterilization Process : ‘Over-design”

Specially, high solid particle medium

Particle protection of M/O

Not practice for steam injection

Small scale vs. Large scale

During sterilization process – Ingredient interaction

Sterilization of the Fermenter

When separate system, fermenter sterilization

By Steam injection

Sparging steam

15 psi for 20 min

Following Sterilization – “Positive Pressure” to avoid vaccum

Sterilization of the Feeds

Sterilization of various feeds – dependent upon nature of additives

Sterilization of Liquid Wastes

Specially “Recombinant Strains” – Strict contamination regulation

Sterilization under contained conditions

Discharge at below 60oC

Sterilization kinetics based on Organisms (not spore)

Should be validated!

Filter Sterilization

For Liquid sterilization

Removal of suspended particles from Liquid

a)  Inertial impaction

b)  Diffusion

c)  Electrostatic attraction

d)  Interception

Inertial Impaction

Particles remain in fibre

More significant in the filtration of gases than in the filtration of liquids

Diffusion

Small particles – Brown movement

More significant in the filtration of gases than in the filtration of liquids

Interception

Larger particles than pore size – direct interception

Smaller particles – retained by interception

Trapping by irregularity of particles

Equally important for gas and liquid

Two types of filter

Absolute filter – smaller pore size

Depth filter – “non-fixed pore filters”

Superior results, but flow resistance – pressure drop

But, filter should be sterilized before use

Filter Sterilization of Fermentation Media

Heat-labile proteins – specially animal tissue culture media

Filter sterilization of Animal Tissue Culture Medium

Criteria

1)  Free of fungal / Bacterial / Mycoplasma

2)  Minimal adsorption of protein on filter

3)  Free of virus

4)  Free of Endotoxins

Absolute Filter System

Steam Sterilizable Hydrophobic Materials

Membrane coating – Prevent protein adsorption

Ex) multiple filtration systems to meet criteria

Prefilter – 5um / Positively charged

Polypropylene

Second filter – 0.5um / Positively charged

Polypropylene

M/O removal

Endotoxin reduction

Third filter – 0.1um ; Nylon / Polyester

M/O removal

Endotoxin Reduction

Fourth filter – similar to third filter

Mycoplasma removal

Endotoxin removal – final

For viral removal – 0.04um Nylon / Polyester