Mono- and Multi-Species Biofilms in Bioprocesses
A special issue of Microorganisms (ISSN 2076-2607). This special issue belongs to the section "Biofilm".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 October 2020) | Viewed by 17722
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Actual biotechnological processes rely mainly on the use of microbial cells in the planktonic state. However, it has been shown that biofilms could be an interesting alternative for improving bioprocessing techniques (i.e., increasing the robustness of the microbial population to environmental fluctuations, increasing the resistance to inhibitors and by-products, and facilitating the transition from batch to continuous bioprocessing). Biofilm applications have been limited in biotechnology due to the lack of dedicated cultivation/monitoring tools and the potential instability of the biofilm phase (biofilm disruption and release of the cells back to the liquid phase). New perspectives are now arising considering the technological developments made at the level of the process analytical technologies (PAT) and bioreactor design. Moreover, the progress made at the level of the understanding of biofilm physiology has led to the identification of new metabolic engineering targets allowing further improvements to the robustness of the biofilm phase.
Biofilms have also been proposed as a way to engineer the microbiome for specific functions. Indeed, the spatial structuration of environmental conditions within the biofilm matrix promotes the co-existence of several species and leads to the stabilization of microbial interactions. This technology thus opens an avenue for the development of new bioprocesses based on the utilization of microbial communities (either natural or engineered).
This Special Issue will be focused on the design and use of single- and multi-species biofilms in the field of industrial, environmental, and health biotechnology, with a special emphasis on the approaches (metabolic and reactor engineering, modeling, management of microbial interactions, etc.) enabling the rapid application of biofilms to real applications.
Dr. Frank Delvigne
Guest Editor
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