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Production of Pharmaceutical Compounds through Microbial FermentationWhite Paper
Overview View the PDF (385 Kb PDF) Overview This original definition has been expanded over time to ‘the conversion of organic materials into relatively simple substances by microorganisms – essentially efficient, flexible bio factories.’ During their growth and lifespan microorganisms build a wide range of different molecules types required for viability and multiplication; adaptation to changing environment; stressful conditions and defence against hostile, competitive microbial threats. Microorganisms that are typically used within the pharmaceutical industry include: prokaryotes such as Bacteria (e.g. Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus) and Streptomycetes (e.g. Streptomyces spp, Actinomyces spp), eukaryotes such as Filamentous Fungi (e.g., Nigrospora spp, Aspergillus spp,) and Yeast (e.g. Saccharomyces cereviciae, Pichia pastoris). The molecules that are of primary interest to the pharmaceutical industry are small molecules such as short peptides and low molecular weight organic molecules, larger molecules including proteins and nucleic acids (DNA, RNA) and macromolecules such as lipids and carbohydrate polymers, plus various combinations of product types, for example lipopolysaccharides, lipopeptides, peptidoglycan. Any of these product types could potentially serve as a drug’s Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API). Microbial fermentation – an introduction Natural biosynthesis of endogenous molecules involves specific multi-step complex routes, some of which can be manipulated for the biosynthesis of foreign molecules. Microorganisms may be genetically modified (recombinant technology) or metabolically engineered by substantial alteration of their endogenous routes. The key elements of fermentation development are strain selection and optimization, media and process development, and finally, scale-up to maximize productivity. Downstream processing utilizes various technologies for extracting, concentrating and purifying the product from a dilute fermentation broth. Fermentation derived product diversity – the recovery and selective purification of the specific desired product out of the whole molecular repertoire – makes fermentation technology a multi-disciplinary methodology encompassing microbiology, organic chemistry, biochemistry and molecular biology. When fermenting volumes larger than 10 L, necessary biosafety measures are taken, especially when Risk Group 2 (RG2) pathogens are used. These include Biosafety Level 2 Large Scale (BSL2-LS) containment facility design and special operational procedures. As these products can be toxic and hazardous, their recovery and purification require adequate chemical/biochemical facilities and equipment including isolators for handling High-Potent APIs (HPAPIs). Under cGMP fermentation procedures, quality is built into the entire process ensuring that regulatory agencies requirements are met in terms of safety, product identity, quality and purity. Deposited in temperature controlled bio-storage, strains handled under strict aseptic procedures will be identified and characterized for homogeneity (absence of foreign growth). Why choose microbial fermentation? These organic molecules can be obtained through multi-step synthesis from their building blocks. However, organic molecules are very complex in nature, potentially encompassing structures such as chiral centers, large stereospecific rings or unique conjugated double bond systems. Going down the synthetic route not only requires significant development but is time consuming and entails higher costs than the fermentation option. The semi-synthetic approach draws upon the advantages of fermentation in the generation of new drugs. Natural molecules are produced through fermentation then modified synthetically, reducing toxicity, increasing potency and selectivity, and overcoming bacterial resistance to traditional antibiotics. Fermentation might also be the sole source for natural therapeutic proteins exclusively expressed in microbial systems. Proteins are complex molecules of mid to high molecular weight. Their functionality and stability largely depend upon their secondary and tertiary structure, as well as various post-translational modifications, mainly glycosilation. The synthetic option is limited to very short peptides. Recombinant technology enables the expression of foreign gene encoding for therapeutic proteins in microbial systems, including those from human source. Using microbial fermentation is advantageous for expression of proteins that do not require post-translational modifications as microbial systems, such as E. coli, lack post-translational mechanics. A further approach is to reduce the protein expressed to the minimal effective domain (Nanobodies/Peptibodies in the case of antibodies). The principal advantages of fermentation over the mammalian system, as illustrated in the table below, are time and yield which ultimately translate to cost. Advantages of Microbial Fermentation Conclusion More information on SAFC's fermentation capabilities
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