15-Oct-2024 12:48 PM
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Chennai, Oct 15 (Reporter) The IIT-Madras is partnering with University of Tours, France, to offer a course on ‘Sustainable Bio-Manufacturing of high-value Phytochemicals’.
This course is being offered through the ‘Global Initiative of Academic Networks’ (GIAN) program to
promote collaboration with international universities, a release from IIT-Madras said on Tuesday.
The course is in line with the vision of the Government of India’s recently-announced ‘BioE3’ Policy,
which aims to promote and facilitate large-scale manufacturing of Bio-products for Sustainable
Development with High-Performance Biomanufacturing.
There will be 30 seats available for in-person participation.
Registration for the course is open till November 22. The course will be taught from December two
to 14.
This course is also open for those outside IIT Madras. Researchers, industry professionals, students (BTech, MTech, MSc, PhD) in plant biotechnology/bioprocess Engineering/biotechnology and faculty from recognized institutions can apply. Applicants are expected to have a basic knowledge of plant cell and microbial technology and fermentation.
The course deals with sustainable biomanufacturing of high-value plant-derived natural products using plant and microbial bio-factories, which can also conserve nature while fulfilling the increasing market demand for phytochemicals for various commercial applications.
It will address the need for fundamental research on the identification of biosynthetic pathways and modern approaches that allow their acceleration as well as new developments in plant biotechnology approaches of rationally integrating bioprocess and metabolic engineering principles to maximize the yield of high-value phytochemicals from plant and yeast cell biofactories for economic feasibility in these bioprocesses.
The objective of this course is to introduce to the participants, current state-of-the-art available technologies to sustainably produce high-value plant metabolites (phytochemicals like drugs and cosmetics) as an alternative to natural plant extraction and total chemical synthesis.
These techniques are based on the application of plant and microbial cell technology called ‘cell factory’ for sustainable biomanufacturing of phytochemicals
Prof. Smita Srivastava, Department of Biotechnology, Bhupat and Jyoti Mehta School of Biosciences, IIT Madras, said, “For India to tap on the growing demand for plant based natural products and phytochemicals in the domestic as well as global market, and to become a global biomanufacturing hub in this niche segment, it is imperative to work around three pillars including Capacity building, Innovation and Entrepreneurship in this specialised domain.”
Prof. Smita Srivastava, who is also the Faculty-in-Charge for IIT Madras Bioincubator, said, “Such short-courses can be extremely useful to create awareness and interest among the budding researchers, industry professionals and entrepreneurs to develop such sustainable technologies
for huge socio-economical impact both nationally and internationally”.
Prof. Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc’h, Director, of Biomolecules and Plant Biotechnologies Laboratory, University of Tours, France, said, “The COVID pandemic in 2020 has, among other things, highlighted the need for States such as those in Asia and Europe to secure production of certain
vital medicines. Thus, the development of technologies for production of active ingredients of plant origin, such as anticancer drugs, as alternatives to growing plants in fields, and as part of a sustainable development approach, is becoming one of the major challenges of the coming
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