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by Staff Writers Vienna, Austria (SPX) Feb 15, 2012
Usually, mould fungi are nothing to cheer about - but now they can be used as "chemical factories". Scientists at the Vienna University of Technology have succeeded in introducing bacterial genes into the fungus Trichoderma, so that the fungus can now produce important chemicals for the pharmaceutical industry. The raw material used by the fungus is abundant - it is chitin, which makes up the shells of crustaceans.
Fifty Times More Expensive than Gold A research team at Vienna UT, led by biotechnologist Astrid Mach-Aigner, has now found a new, eco-friendly way to produce NANA. The vast knowledge about the genetics of the fungus Trichoderma accumulated at Vienna UT over the years was crucial for the project.
Bacterial Genes for Mould Fungi "Usually, Trichoderma breaks down chitin to monomer amino sugars", says Mach-Aigner. Due to the new genes, two extra reaction steps are now possible - and eventually the desired pharmaceutical N-Acetylneuraminic acid is produced.
Chitin as a Natural Resource It is estimated that in the sea alone, ten billion tons of chitin are formed every year - several hundred times more than the cumulated body mass of all people on earth. This makes chitin a very sustainable resource for chemical synthesis. The newly developed Trichoderma line can now be cultivated in bioreactors and produces the precious acid NANA from chitin. The process has now been patented by the Vienna University of Technology and will be used for the cheap and eco-friendly production of pharmaceuticals on an industrial scale in the near future.
Vienna University of Technology Hospital and Medical News at InternDaily.com
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