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Metabolic Engineering - T. Scheper and Jens Nielsen

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  • Saadedin
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    • Sep 2018 
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    Metabolic Engineering - T. Scheper and Jens Nielsen







    Preface

    With the introduction of genetic engineering of Escherichia coli by Cohen, Boyer

    and co-workers

    in 1973,

    the way was paved for a completely new approach to

    optimisation of existing biotech processes and development of completely new

    ones. This lead to new biotech processes for the production of recombinant proteins,

    e. g. the production of human insulin by a recombinant E. coli.With the

    further development in genetic engineering techniques the possibility ofto applying



    this for optimisation of classical fermentation processes soon became

    obvious, and advancements in genetic engineering allowed a far more rational

    approach to strain improvement than the classical approach of mutagenesis and

    screening, namely introduction of directed genetic changes through rDNA technology.

    In 1991, this led Bailey to discuss the emerging of a new science called

    metabolic engineering, which he defined as “the improvement of cellular activities



    by manipulations of enzymatic, transport, and regulatory functions of the

    cell with the use of recombinant DNA technology”. Initially metabolic engineering



    was simply the technological manifestation of applied molecular biology,

    but with the rapid development in new analytical- and cloning techniques, it has

    become possible to introduce directed genetic changes rapidly and subsequently

    analyse

    the consequences

    of

    the introduced changes at the cellular level.

    In recent years, there has been a rapid development in the field of metabolic

    engineering, and this has resulted in extensive number of reviews in the field

    (see e. g. Nielsen, 2001)., There has been one text book describing the principles

    and methodologies of metabolic engineering (Stephanopoulos et al., 1998), and

    a multi-author book with many excellent examples of metabolic engineering

    edited by Lee and Papoutsakis (1999). A journal fully devoted to this topic has

    appeared (*), there are sessions on metabolic engineering at

    most conferences on biochemical engineering and applied microbiology, and a

    conference series devoted to this topic has developed. With this extensive coverage

    of

    this rapidly growing research field, it is impossible to cover all aspects of

    metabolic engineering in a single issue of Advances in Biochemical Engineering/Biotechnology.

    However, several key examples of metabolic engineering

    will be reviewed in this volume:







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