Abstract

Microbes have proved useful to us in many different ways. To utilize microbes, we have mostly focused on maximizing growth, to improve yield of chemicals derived from the microbes. However, to truly tap into their potential, we should also aim to understand microbial physiology. We present a historical perspective of the developments in the field of Microbial Biotechnology, focusing on how the growth-modelling approaches have changed. Starting from simple empirical growth models, we have evolved towards mechanistic and phenomenological models which use molecular and physiological details to drastically improve prediction power of these models. Lastly, we explore the as of yet unsolved questions in microbial physiology, and discuss how the ability to monitor microbial growth at single cell resolution using the lab-on-a-chip technologies is uncovering previously unobservable causal principles underlying microbial growth.

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