|
Role
of Fermentor and Bioreactor in Drug Development
NEO GENESIS ENGINEERING PVT LIMITED
The history
of human civilization is too long and non-stop having its own evolution
and dynamics. At any given time a civilization requires few basic
things i.e., food, clothe and shelter. In modern society medicines
have been added up. The history of drug development is also too
long. It starts from Ayurveda and continues to modern drugs and
enters into solution of incurable diseases like cancer, AIDS and
HIV.
Now the question
arises, what are the limits of the earth for support of man? How
can we establish a pattern of use of the earth that keeps many possibilities
open for the future, a pattern of development that is sustainable?
The underling
problem is growth in the human population, a growth sustained by
new technology that allows more intensive of resources and expansion
into untouched realms of the earth. At each stage of technological
development, there is an optimum size of population that offers
highest standard of living. Below that population size, the potential
of the available technology is not realized; but as economic, social
and political forces push populations above the optimum, resources
are degraded progressives. The pattern is fundamental, a framework
within which the effects of the biotic impoverishment of the earth
now under way can be reviewed.
The world's
most important resources are biotic - the plants and animals that
maintain the biosphere as a habitat suitable for life. The continued
expansion of the human enterprise in its current mode is reducing
both the number of species and flux of the energy through biotic
systems.
The solution,
if there is one, must recognize that natural communities whose functions
are poorly known dominate detailed management of the biosphere.
The most practical steps seem to be those that limit human intrusion.
1. Steps towards
closing man dominated systems such as agricultural and industrial
activities to the point where their net effects on the biosphere
approximate those of the natural systems they have replaced
2. Zoning segments
of the biosphere to maintain diversity at all levels. There are
the large steps. They will require substantial innovation, scholarship,
technology and engineering. The earth is obviously finite; its resources
limited. But the questions of how; large it is and what the limits
might be for the support of man are not as easily answered as the
concept of a finite earth might imply. The question of how many
people the world can support is unanswerable in a finite sense.
What do we want? What purposes do the poverty and political chaos
in nations attempting to serve?Support the world's densest populations:
India, China, EI Salvador and soon much as Africa.
An approach
Towards the Solution of Problem
The Science
has the answer. Biotechnology, (a combination of biology, physics,
chemistry, statistics and mathematics) a new subject has been developed
gradually to explore the possibilities of solving global major issues
like hunger, shelter, incurable diseases. As a result, Biotechnology
has broaden its wings into many fields like agriculture, microbiology,
biomedical, chemical; molecular biology, genetic engineering, forensic,
petrochemical, environment, pharmaceuticals, tissue culture, pharmacology,
space research and toxicology. Microorganisms based drug research,
an area where we need to culture specific organisms like bacteria
with some stringent monitoring and control options to serve specific
goal.
However, industrial
microbiology deals with all forms of microbiology, which have an
economic aspect. It deals with those areas of microbiology on which,
in some manner, a monetary value can be placed, regardless of whether
the microbiology involves a fermentation product or some form of
deterioration, diseases or waste disposal. In most instances, the
economic criterion applies to a desire either to cause or to allow
some specific type of growth or metabolic activity or to prevent
microbial growth.
These considerations
make it apparent that industrial microbiology is a very broad area
for study. In fact, many non-industrial areas of microbiology are
important to industrial microbiology and should be taken into consideration
in understanding the concepts and practice of industrial microbiology.
These areas include, among others, soil and agriculture microbiology,
medical microbiology, microbial physiology, cytology and physiology,
morphology, virology, genetics, marine microbiology, food and dairy
microbiology and immunology.
The system
The industrial
usage of microorganisms often requires that they can be grown in
large vessel containing considerable quantities of nutritive media.
The vessels are commonly called fermentors and they can be quite
complicated in design, since frequently they must provide for the
control and observation of many parameters e.g. microbial growth
and biosynthesis.
The fermentor
is designed to provide the best possible growth and biosynthetic
conditions for industrially important microbial cultures and to
allow ease of manipulation for all operations associated with the
use of fermentors. The vessel must be strong enough to withstand
the pressure of large volumes of aqueous media but at the same time,
the materials from which they are fabricated must not be corroded
by fermentation product nor contribute toxic ions to the growth
medium.
However, a standard
fermentor/ bioreactor can be any size depending on application.
It may be of glass vessel or stainless steel or nay other special
material. The system have the facility to control all possible options
like temperature, Dissolve oxygen, foam, agitation, in situ sterilization
or auto calve, pH, an line biochemistry analyzer. Sampling can done
through syringe / pipettes or peristaltic pumps.
The SCADA software
allows total monitoring and control of the reaction. An intuitive
interface, 2D and 3-D import facility, statistical process control
are few technical features. Network support and advanced script
programming make the software flexible and suitable for any operational
needs.
Area of
Research and Few Recent Developments
Cancer research:Bioreactor
has cultured single cell of cancers of the skin (melanoma), rostate,
ovary, breast, bone and colon into viable cell cultures. Tissue
cultures can be grown for at least 60 days before they become too
large to remain suspended in the bioreactor growth medium.
Infectious
Diseases: The US army medical research institute of infectious
diseases uses the bioreactor to grow cultures rather than using
live animal in the study of how the Ebola Virus transmitted.
Immune System
Repression: One of the marvels of the human immune system is
how lymphocytes, like escape artists, squeeze through the tight
spaces between cells in search of invading diseases. Bioreactor
studies using collagen reveal that lymphocytes exposed to simulate
low-g for 72 hours do not move. This has been verified with experiments
aboard shuttle missions and demonstrates that the bioreactor is
a good simulation of low growth conditions.
Drug efficiency:
Kidney and heart tissues cultured in the bioreactor show the appropriate
drug receptor sites that allow testing drugs to determine their
safety without using animals. This also reduces the need to use
human volunteers in final testing.
National
Institute of Health: In 1994, NASA and national institutes of
Health signed an interagency agreement to provide NASA bioreactor
technology to NIH and to establish a joint center for three-dimensional
tissue culture at national institute pf child health and Hunan development.
Antibiotic
Production: The industrial industry received its greatest impetus
for expansion and profits with the advent and exploitation of antibiotics
chemotherapeutic agents. The demand of penicillin during World War
II and later for streptomycin and other antibiotics brought on the
undertaking of intensive research programs deigned to find organisms
capable to produce good antibiotics.
AIDS Research
- Drug
efficiency testing
- Evaluation testing
- Drug combination studies
Tuberculosis
Research
- In vitro and
in vivo testing
- Multiple drug resistant strains
Molecular
Biology and Genetic Engineering
- Biosensors
- Gene expression studies
- PCR technologies
Biopesticide
safety assessment
--Microbial
and biochemical pesticides
Conclusion
Human health
and well-being are affected by many factors and although underlying
genetic and physiological processes may be among the first to spring
to mind in terms of specific medical disorders, it is increasingly
clear that life style and exposure to environmental factors also
play an important role. Statistics suggest that more that 4 million
people are infected with Salmonella and, E.Coli are related bacteria
each year in the UK. Growing old and suffering associated health
changes may not be perceived as a medical issue at all.
Knowledge about
basic biological processes id directly relevant to health issues
such as food safety and maintenance of health span. And it perhaps
goes almost without saying, that basis research into biological
systems such as body's defensive immune system, provides knowledge
that is directly relevant to our understanding of diseases processes
and which may be used, therefore, to design new strategies for medical
intervention. But it is probably in the area of developing new drugs
and new approaches to the prevention and treatment of currently
intractable conditions that the rapid advances in the biological
sciences will make their greatest impact in the short term. However,
Bioreactor and fermentor is very important tool to explore the different
stains of microorganisms, which are of our interest.
|