Controlled aggregation of microbial cells

TechnologySlovinskoTOSI20200330001
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Summary: 
A Slovenian research organization has developed a method for controlled aggregation of microbial cells. The method is useful in different biotechnology fields such as plant and food biotechnology, fermentation, remediation, biofouling etc. Partners who use microbial co-cultures in their biotechnological applications are sought for technical cooperation agreements to validate the technology in industrial environment.
Description: 
Use of microbial co-cultures is getting more and more important in many biotechnological processes, such as food biotechnology, plant biotechnology, production of fuels, fermentation, remediation, biofouling etc. It can improve the process or the final biotechnological product. The problem: The systems of co-culture are hard to optimize due to different growth dynamics of different strains and increased distances between cells when complex substrates are broken down to the level that is acceptable for use by microbes that produce desired substances. For example, scavenging oxygen is currently difficult to monitor within the whole microbial culture. Also, the co-culture process is often separated into two steps, aerobic and anaerobic, and managing the process with currently available techniques is limited in efficiencies due to the large distances between the cells. The solution: A Slovenian research organization has developed a method for controlled aggregation of microbial cells, which enables close contact between cells and more intensive interactions. Moreover, the precise placement of different bacterial cells using a top-down approach enables preparation of smart carriers composed of particular cells placed in particular spaces. The interactions facilitate (i) exchange of growth substrates, secondary metabolites as well as quorum sensing molecules, (ii) increased local scavenging of oxygen, enabling the formation of anaerobic niches within the aggregates, and (iii) determination of temporal and spatial activities of multicellular aggregated formations. The novel method enables layering of microbial cells of the same or different type in a way that controls the size, structure and number of aggregates as well as the potential spatial distribution of the different species of cells within the aggregates. Microbial cells are coated with charged polyelectrolytes as well as magnetic nanoparticles or any other types of organic or inorganic colloids, which enables building layers of microbial cells in either two- or three-dimensional structures. Laboratory experiments have been successfully conducted on Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas putida, and Pseudomonas stutzeri as well as on Lactococcus lactis and different Staphylococcus spp. and Bacillus spp. strains, and the cells were separated from the solution. The Slovenian research organization would like to validate this technology in a relevant industrial environment and is looking for partners for a technical cooperation agreement. The technology has many applications in different biotechnology fields such as plant and food biotechnology, remediation, biofouling as well as in medical setups including preparation of vaccines and bacteriotherapy in anticancer treatments etc. The role of partner(s) would be to test the developed method on their applications (usage of microbial co-cultures for different biotechnological processes) in technical cooperation agreement.
Type (e.g. company, R&D institution…), field of industry and Role of Partner Sought: 
Type of partner sought: Biotechnology companies that use microbial co-cultures for different applications (biotechnological fermentation, improvement of crop growth, production of food, remediation, production of fuels, biofouling as well as in medical setups including preparation of vaccines and bacteriotherapy in anticancer treatments etc.). Role of partner sought: Take part in technical cooperation to jointly validate the technology in relevant industrial environment.
Stage of Development: 
Under development/lab tested
IPR Status: 
Patent(s) applied for but not yet granted
External code: 
TOSI20200330001