Our microbes not only produce antibiotics, they also overproduce amino acids

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Abstract

Fermentative production of amino acids is an important goal of modern biotechnology. Through fermentation, micro-organisms growing on inexpensive carbon and nitrogen sources can produce a wide array of valuable products including amino acids. The amino acid market is $8 billion and mainly impacts the food, pharmaceutical and cosmetics industries. In terms of tons of amino acids produced per year by fermentation, L-glutamate is the most important amino acid produced (3.3 million), followed by L-lysine (2.2 million). The bacteria producing these amino acids are among the top fermentation organisms with respect to titers. Corynebacterium glutamicum is the best producer.

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Sanchez, S., Rodríguez-Sanoja, R., Ramos, A., & Demain, A. L. (2018, January 1). Our microbes not only produce antibiotics, they also overproduce amino acids. Journal of Antibiotics. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/ja.2017.142

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