Microbes in Human Welfare

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MICROBES IN HUMAN WELFARE

Introduction

The branch of biology which deals with the study of microorganism are
called as “Microbiology”. the biosphere i.e the biotic and abiotic component has
a variety of microorganisms that exhibit beneficial activities. They include small
algae, fungi, bacteria, protozoans, mycoplasmas and related organisms. A large
number of microbes help human civilization through their useful activities. These
activities are either of domestic, industrial or commercial importance. It has
several applied branches such as medical microbiology, food microbiology,
industrial microbiology, etc.

MICROBES IN HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTION:

A number of microbes are involved in their production through the process


of fermentation. The use of microbes in food production is almost as old as
human civilization. Traditionally a number of microbes from the surrounding
environment are being used in production of several indigenous fermented foods.
A few examples are given below.

Idli, dhokla, jalebi are comman Indian delicacies. The dough


preapared is allowed to ferment for couple of days.

a) Microbes in food preparation:

The dough for dhokla is prepared by mixing grain flour (besan) with butter
milk. The lactobacilli bring about the fermentation process.

Many species of bacteria and yeast are useful in making idli and dosa. The
bubbles of CC\ trapped in glutein make idlies puffy. The microorganisms like
species of Bacillus, Candida and Saccharomyces are involved in this process.
Many lactobacilli are involved in the preparation of jalebie, nan, etc.

b) Microbes as the source of food:

Some microbes or their fruiting bodies are directly used as a source of food,
rich in protein. The term ‘SCP’ or single cell protein denotes dead and dried cells
of microbes like bacteria, algae, molds and yeasts. They are obtained by growing
microbes of various groups on different substrates. These microbes include
bacteria like. Bacillus subtilis, fungi like, species of Candida and Saccharomyces
cerevisiae and algae such as species of Chlorella.

Mushrooms and truffles are directly used as food. They belong to


basidiomycetes (fungi) and produce large fleshy fruiting bodies which are edible.
They are low calorie, sugar-free, fat-free but rich in proteins, vitamins, minerals
and amino acids.

Some common examples of edible mushrooms are-

Common name Biological name

i. White button mushroom Agaricus bisporus


ii. Paddy straw mushroom Volvariella volvacea
iii. Oyster mushroom Pleuratus florida

Some mushrooms are non-edible (poisonous) e. g. toadstools.

Agaricus

MICROBES IN INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION:


b) Production of Alcoholic Beverages:

Alcoholic beverages are the products of alcoholic fermentation of specific


substrates. They include liquors like wine, beer and whisky. The use of microbes
in making fermented beverages is known since about 700 B.C. to Egyptians,
Romans and Greeks.

A number of strains of the’ yeast. Saccharomyces cerevisiae var.


ellipsoideus are used in industrial production of wine. Different flavours of wine
are obtained by using different fruit juices.

Beer is another alcoholic liquor obtained from fermented grains, mostly


barley. Suitable strains of S. cerevisiae are used for fermentation. ‘ It is produced
through various steps like malting, mashing and fermentation. It is allowed to
stand for a few days. Then it is clarified, carboxylated, filled in bottles, packed
and marketed. Wine and beer are produced without distillation.

Whisky is obtained by fermenting mixed’ grains of corn, wheat, bailey, etc.


The product of fermentation is then distilled.

c) Organic Acid Fermentation:

A number of organic acids are obtained by fermentation using various microbes


as given below.

Organic acid Microbes used


i) Citric acid Aspergillus niger
ii) Gluconic acid Aspergillus niger
iii) Fumaric acid Rhizopus arrhizus
iv) Acetic acid Acetobacter aceti
(Vinegar)
Tubuler tower fermenter (diagrammatic)

d) Vitamin Production:

Vitamins are complex organic compounds required in very small quantities


for normal growth and development of the body. They include vitamins A. B, C, D,
E and K. They may be water soluble (vitamins B and C) or fat soluble (vitamins A,
D, B and K). All the vitamins are not produced in human body. Therefore, they are
to be consumed through food or tablets.

Vitamins are manufactured by fermentation technology using different


microbial sources as given below.

Name of the vitamin Microbial source

i. Vitamin B2 Neurospora gossypii

Eremothecium ashbyi

ii. Vitamin B12 Pseudomonas denificans

iii. Vitamin C Aspergillus niger


Antibiotic. Production:

Some secondary metabolites, products of fermentation, have therapeutie


importance arid are used in medical treatment. For example, penicillin and a
number of other antibiotics are used in control of infectious diseases.’

Antibiotics are the substances produced in small amounts by certain


microbes to inhibit die growth of other microbes. They may be anti-fungal
(fungistatic or fungicidal) or anti-bacterial (bacteristatic or bactericidal) in nature.

The first antibiotic was discovered accidentally by the British physician Dr.
Alexander Fleming in 1929 when he was working with the pathogenic bacterium
Staphylococcus aureus. Since then a number of antibiotics have been produced
and used therapeutically. Some common antibiotics and their microbial sources
are listed below.

Antibiotic produced Microbial source

1) Chloromycetin Streptomyces venezuelae

ii) Erythromycin Streptomyces erythreus

iii) Penicillin Penicillium chrysogenum

iv) Streptomycin Streptomyces griseus

Many deadly diseases such as plague, whooping cough, diphtheria and


leprosy, which Used to kill millions all over the world can be now controlled by
antibiotics.

Gibberellin Production:

Gibberellins are a group of growth hormones mainly produced by higher


plants and fungi to promote growth by stem elongation. The first lavor llins
was isolated by two Japanese scientists Yabuta and Sumiki in 1938 from rice
seedlings infected with the fungus Gibberella fujikuroi.
About 15 types of gibberellins have been isolated from G. fujikuroi.
Gibberellins have many practical applications. They are used to induce
parthenocarpy in apple, pear etc. They are used in breaking dormancy and
inducing flowering also.

Enzyme Production:

Enzymes are biocatalysts, which either initiate or accelerate all biochemical


processes in living organisms. A number of hydrolytic enzymes that degrade
starch, proteins, fats and pectin into simple compounds are known. Traditionally,
amylase, papain and pectinase were used in food processing. In recent years,
many more enzymes are being produced for getting desirable lavor of cheese
and butter, sweetness of confectionaries, animal feed, soyabean milk,
modification of food gums, etc. Following are a few examples of enzymes used in
industrial food processing.

Name of the enzyme Microbial source

i) Invertase Saccharomyces cerevisiae

ii) Pectinase Sclerotiana libertine

iii) Lipase Rhizopus spp

iv) Cellulase Trichoderma konigi

Dairy industry:

Various products are obtained from milk in dairy industry using microbial
species. Some of these products are cheese, yoghurt, buttermilk, paneer etc.
Species of Streptomyces, Penicillium and Lactobacillus are commonly employed.

At the domestic level, preparation of fermented milk products started in the


early period of human civilization. Curd and buttermilk were produced using
lactic acid bacteria. Cheese too is a product of fermentation by fungi.
MICROBES IN SEWAGE TREATMENT:

Large quantity of waste water are generated every day in cities and towns.
This waste water is also called sewage. Sewage water usually contains high
levels of organic matter, human excreta and domestic wastes and microbes.
Microbes can be pathogenic, It is essential to remove organic matter from the
waste water before it is made available for human use. It cannot be discharged
into natural water bodies like river directly. It must be treated in sewage treatment
plants (STPs).

Sewage treatment includes three basic processes namely, primary


treatment, secondary treatment and tertiary, treatment.

The primary treatment is a physical process and removes large pieces of


floating debris, oily substances, etc. through filtration and sedimentation. The
secondary treatment is a biochemical process.

Sewage treatment plant.

The secondary treatment or biological treatment The primary effluent is


passed into the large aeration tanks. Here it is constantly agitated mechanically
and air is pumped into it. Due to this vigourous growth of useful aerobic
microbes into floes takes place, (floes are the masses of bacteria assocated with
fungal filaments to form mesh like structures). These microbes consume the
major part of the organic matter in the effluent as they grow. Due to this BOD
(Biological Oxygen Demand) of the effluent is singnificantly reduced.

Tertiary treatment – Once the BOD of waste water is reduced, it is passed into
a settling tank. Here the bacterial floes are allowed to sediment. The sediment is
called activated sludge. Small part of this is passed back into aeration tank and
the major part is pumped into large tanks called anaerobic sludge digesters. In
these tanks anaerobic bacteria grow and digest the bacteria and fungi in the
sludge. During this digestion gases such as methane, hydrogen sulphide, CO2
are produced that form gases. Effluents from these plants are released in natural
water bodies like rivers and streams.

MICROBES IN BIOGAS PRODUCTION:

Biogas - which mainly contains methane - is used both as a domestic as


well as industrial fuel. It is a non-conventional and renewable source of energy
and obtained by microbial fermentation.

Biogas production by microbes is a complex process and involves several


anaerobic microbial species growing in marshy places, organic sediments and in
the rumen (part of stomach) of ruminant animals.

Plant wastes and animal wastes are commonly used for biogas generation.
It includes domestic waste, agricultural waste, agro-industrial waste, municipal
waste, forestry waste, etc.

The biogas contains about 50 - 80% methane, 15 - 45% C02 and other
gases in traces. Its chemical composition depends upon the nature of the waste
material used and prevailing environmental conditions.

Biogas production involves 3 major processes-

- Anaerobic digestion or hydrolysis,

- Acetogenesis or Acidogenesis and


- Methanogenesis
The anaerobic digestion occurs by certain anaerobic bacteria like species of
Clostridium, Pseudomonas, etc. m this process complex insoluble polymers are
converted to simple soluble monomers with the help of bacterial hydrolytic
enzymes. These monomers are further converted into organic acids,chiefly acetic
acid by enzymes of acidogenic bacteria Finally, acetic acid is transformed to
biogas by the enzymes of methanogenic bacteria. These bacteria include species
of Methanococcus and Methanobacillus.

Bio gas plant (diagrammatic)

Polymers Anaerobic bacteria Monomers

Monomers Acidogenic bacteria Organic acids

Organic acids Methanogenic bacteria Methane

+ CO2 + other gases

Biogas has several advantages. It is a cheap, safe and renewable source of


energy. It can be used for domestic lighting, cooking, street lighting as well as
small scale industries. It burns with blue flame and without smoke. It helps to
improve sanitation of the surrounding. It is eco-friendly and does not cause
pollution and imbalance of the environment. It can be easily generated, stored
and transported.

MICROBES AS BIOCONTROL AGENTS:

The biological agents (organisms) which can be used to kill or check the
proliferation of disease causing agents are called biopesticides.

Use of micro-organisms or biological methods for controlling plant diseases


and pests is called Biocontrol. Use of chemical pesticides and insecticides is.
effective but these chemicals are toxic and extremely harmful to human beings,
domestic animals and useful pollinators. Moreover they pollute our environment
(soil, ground water and air). Therefore use of chemical pesticides should be
minimum.

In modern, agriculture microbes are used for controlling pests. These


microbes are either pathogens or predators or parasites on the pests. Natural
predation is useful and harmless. Contrary to the conventional use of chemicals
which kill both useful and harmful organisms indiscriminately, modern organic
farmer tries to understand the food chains and the web of interactions between
the organisms that constitute the flora and fauna of field and uses suitable
biopesticide. He knows their life-cycles, pattern of feeding and the habitats that
they prefer. Organic farmer knows that the biodiversity is important, more the
variety a landscape has, the more sustainable it is. This helps him develop and
use appropriate biocontrol methods.

An example of microbial bio-control agent is Bacillus thuringiensis. Dried


spores of B.thuringiensis are mixed with water and sprayed onto vulnerable
plants such as cotton, brassicas etc. when insect larvae eat the leaves, they get
killed as toxins are released in their gut by the bacteria. SNow the gene which is
responsible to produce the toxic substance is introduced into the cotton plant
using r-DNA technology and this transgenic plant is called Bt. Cotton.
Four groups of biocontrol agents are known. They are bacteria, fungi,
protozoans and viruses. Some common examples are given below.

a) Microbial pesticides and their host range:

Pathogen Host range

Bacteria:

i’) Bacillus thuringiensis (fit) Caterpillais . (larvae of moths and


butterflies), larvae of Aedes, black flies,
some adult beetles,. wax moths, etc.

Fungi: Aphids, mealy bugs. mites, white ffies, etc..

i) Beauveria bassiana

Protozoans: Grasshoppers,

Nosema locustae caterpillars,

some com-borers

and crickets

Viruses:

i) Nucleopolyhedrovirus Gypsy moths and

or NPV caterpillars

(125 types known)

Microbes are used as herbicides also. Many dicot herbs grow in the field
of cereals as weeds and these weeds can be killed by certain microbes. For
examples -

b) Microbial herbicides/weedicides:

(1) Pathogenic fungi as mycoherbicides:


i) Phytophthora palmivora

ii) Alternaria crassa

iii) Fusarium sp.

(2) Bacterial pathogens as herbicides:

i) Pseudomonas sp.

ii) Xanthomonas sp.

iii) Agrobacteriurn sp.

MICROBES AS BIOFERTILIZERS

For the ever increasing demand of


agricultural products chemical fertilizers are traditionally used on large scale to
obtain more yield. We are now aware of the problems associated with the overuse
of the chemical fertilizers, significant one is they cause pollution

Therefore for better and sustainable agricultural production, the use of


renewable nutritional sources, biofertilizers is necessary. It is essential to switch
over to organic farming.

The biofertilizers are mostly nitrogen-fixing microbes which enrich soil


with nutrients. They may be free living or symbiotic, bacteria or cyanobacteria.

Fungi as biofertilizers are mostly symbiotic and they accelerate water and
nutrient uptake of crop plants and thereby increase the yield.

Bacterial Biofertilizers : Rhizobia are the nitrogen fixing bacteria that form
symbiotic association with roots of leguminous plants. They bring about nodule
formation on the roots and multiply inside the nodule. They fix atmospheric
nitrogen into organic forms which can be used by plants as nutrients. There are
many species of Rhizobium each specific for a particular species of leguminous
plant. E.g. R. leguminosarum is specific to pea. R. phaseoli to beans. Pure culture
of specific species is now raised in the laboratory, and is used to prepare a
biofertilizer.

(A) Root system of Leguminous plant (B) T. S. of root with nodule

Free living nitrogen fixing bacteria such as Azotobacter and Azospirillum


are also used as bio-fertilizers.

Cyanobacterial Biofertilizers -Cyanobacteria are autotrophic microbes that


are widely distributed in aquatic and terrestrial environment. Many are free living,
filamentous and are used as biofertilizers in paddy fields (Rice) e.g. Aulosira,
Tolypotarix, Nostoc, etc. These blue green algae (BGA) have some specialized
and colourless cells, called heterocysts which are the sites for nitrogen fixation.

Some species of Anabaena are symbiotic. (Anabaena azollae). Azolla is an


aquatic fern. It propagates vegetatively and spreads in rice-fields very- rapidly.
Anabaena filaments are with heterocyst and they multiply inside the air space of
the dorsal lobe of leaves of Azolla. Anabaena azollae and Nostoc are commonly
used as biofertilizer for rice.
A. Azolla B. T.S. of azolla leaf showing filaments of nabae

Fungal biofertilizers - (Mycorrhizae)

Mycorrhiza is a fungus. It forms symbiotic association with the roots of


higher plants. There are two types; Ectomycorrhiza, Endomycorrhiza,

Ectomycorrh izae have well developed mycelium which forms mantle on the
outside of the roots. This increases surface area of roots and accelerates water
and nutrient uptake. Due to this the plant vigour, growth and yield increase.

(A) (B)

Ectomycorrhizae Endomycorrhizae

Endomycorrhizae grow in between and within the cortical cells of roots.


Fungal hyphae penetrate the cells and form vesicles or finely branched
arbuscles. Hence, they are called Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhizae or VAM. The
plants with VAM grow luxurientiy in less irrigated lands.
Thus association of VAM with crop plants help in conversion of less
productive field into more productive field.

Now in our country many biofertilzers are available in market to reduce the
use of chemical fertilizers.

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