首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
An extracellular detergent tolerant protease producing strain VSG-4 was isolated from tropical soil sample and identified as Bacillus subtilis based on morphological, biochemical characteristics as well as 16S-rRNA gene sequencing. The VSG-4 protease was purified to homogeneity using ammonium sulphate precipitation, dialysis and sephadex G-200 gel permeation chromatography with a 17.4 purification fold. The purified enzyme was active and stable over a broad range of pH (8.0–11.0, optimum at 9.0) and temperature (40°C to 60°C, optimum at 50°C). The thermostability of the enzyme was significantly increased by the addition CaCl2. This enzyme was strongly inhibited by PMSF and DFP, suggesting that it belongs to the serine protease superfamily. The purified VSG-4 alkaline protease showed remarkable stability in anionic (5 mM SDS) and ionic (1% Trion X-100 and 1% Tween 80) detergents. It retained 97±2% and 83.6±1.1% of its initial activity after 1 h preincubation in the presence of 1 % H2O2 and 1 % sodium perborate, respectively. Furthermore, the purified enzyme showed excellent stability and compatibility with some commercial laundry detergents besides its stain removal capacity. Considering these promising properties, VSG-4 protease may find tremendous application in laundry detergent formulations.  相似文献   

2.
A uricase-producing bacterium was isolated from soil with a medium containing uric acid as the only carbon source. Based on its morphological and physiological characteristics, as well as 16S rDNA sequence and phylogenetic tree analysis, this new isolate belong to the genus Microbacterium. After heat treatment at 70 °C for 30 min, the uricase retained about 100% of the initial activity. The enzyme activity remained largely unchanged when it was stored in borate buffer at pH 8.5 at 37 °C for 40 days. The effects of different factors on the enzyme production were studied. Maize milk was the best C and N resources, and the uric acid showed to be an inducer for uricase production. When the strain was cultured at 30 °C at pH 7.5 for 30–36 h, the uricase activity peaked at 1.0 U/ml.  相似文献   

3.
An extracellular protease was produced under stress conditions of high temperature and high salinity by a newly isolated moderate halophile, Salinivibrio sp. strain AF-2004 in a basal medium containing peptone, beef extract, glucose and NaCl. A modification of Kunitz method was used for protease assay. The isolate was capable of producing protease in the presence of sodium chloride, sodium sulfate, sodium nitrate, sodium nitrite, potassium chloride, sodium acetate and sodium citrate. The maximum protease was secreted in the presence of 7.5 to 10% (w/v) sodium sulfate or 3% (w/v) sodium acetate (4.6 U ml−1). Various carbon sources including glucose, lactose, casein and peptone were capable of inducing enzyme production. The optimum pH, temperature and aeration for enzyme production were 9.0, 32 °C and 220 rpm, respectively. The enzyme production corresponded with growth and reached a maximum level during the mid-stationary phase. Maximum protease activity was exhibited in the medium containing 1% (w/v) NaCl at 60 °C, with 18% and 41% activity reductions at temperature 50 and 70 °C, respectively. The optimum pH for enzyme activity was 8.5, with 86% and 75% residual activities at pH 10 and 6, respectively. The activity of enzyme was inhibited by EDTA. These results suggest that the protease secreted by Salinivibrio sp. strain AF-2004 is industrially important from the perspectives of its activity at a broad pH ranges (5.0–10.0), its moderate thermoactivity in addition to its high tolerance to a wide range of salt concentration (0–10% NaCl).  相似文献   

4.
Purified RNase Rs, from Rhizopus stolonifer, when covalently coupled to aminoethyl (AE) Bio-Gel P-2, via its carbohydrate moiety, retained 35–40% activity of the soluble enzyme. Optimization of coupling conditions showed that the most active immobilized preparations are obtained when 400 units of 100 μM periodate oxidized enzyme are allowed to react with 1 ml (packed volume) of AE-Bio-Gel P-2 at 6±1°C for 15 h. Immobilization did not change the pH and temperature optima of the enzyme but it increased the temperature stability. Immobilization did not bring about a change in the Km but resulted in a 2·5-fold decrease in the Vmax. Substrate concentrations as high as 25 mg of RNA could be converted to more than 80% 2′,3′ cyclic nucleotides in 14 h, at pH 5·5 and 37°C. On repeated use, the bound enzyme retained 70% of its initial activity after six cycles of use. The bound enzyme could be stored in wet state for 60 days without any significant loss in its initial activity.  相似文献   

5.
An extracellular protease from the marine bacterium Sphingomonas paucimobilis, strain 116, isolated from the stomach of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba Dana, was purified and characterized. The excretion of protease was maximal at temperatures from 5 to 10°C, i.e. below the temperature optimum for the strain growth (15°C). The highly purified enzyme was a metalloprotease [sensivity to ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)] and showed maximal activity against proteins at 20–30°C and pH 6.5–7.0, and towards N-benzoyl-tyrosine ethyl ester (BzTyrOEt) at pH 8.0. At 0°C the enzyme retained as much as 47% of maximal activity in hydrolysis of urea denatured haemoglobin (Hb) (at pH 7.0), and at −5 and −10°C, 37 and 30%, respectively. The metalloprotease was stable up to 30°C for 15 min and up to 20°C for 60 min. These results indicate that the proteinase from S. paucimobilis 116 is a cold-adapted enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
A highly enantioselective carbonyl reductase produced by a new yeast strain Candida viswanathii MTCC 5158, which was isolated using an acetophenone enriched medium, has been purified and characterized. The enzyme has been purified to near homogeneity using ammonium sulfate precipitation, ion exchange and gel filtration chromatography. The molecular properties of the carbonyl reductase suggested the native enzyme to be tetrameric, with an apparent molecular weight of 120 kDa, the monomer being about 29 kDa. Acetyl aryl ketones were found to be the preferred substrates for the enzyme and the best reaction was the enantioselective reduction of acetophenone. The enzyme yielded (S)-alcohol in preference to (R)-alcohol and utilized NADH, but not NADPH as the cofactor. The purified enzyme exhibited maximum enzyme activity at pH 7.0 and 60 °C. The enzyme retained about 80% of its activity after 7 h incubation at 25 °C in sodium phosphate buffer (50 mM, pH 7.0). The addition of reducing agents like dithiothreitol and β-mercaptoethanol enhanced the enzyme activity while organic solvents, detergents and chaotropic agents had deleterious effect on enzyme activity. Metal chelating agents like hydroxyquinoline and o-phenanthroline have significant effect on enzyme activity suggesting that the carbonyl reductase required the presence of a tightly bound metal ion for activity or stability. The maximum reaction rate (Vmax) and apparent Michaelis–Menten constant (Km) for acetophenone and NADH were 59.21 μmol/(min mg) protein and 0.153 mM and 82.64 μmol/(min mg) protein and 0.157 mM at a concentration range of 0.2–2 mM acetophenone (NADH fixed at 0.5 mM) and 0.1–0.5 mM NADH (acetophenone fixed at 2 mM), respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PD100 capable of producing an extracellular protease was isolated from the soil collected from local area (garbage site) from Shivage market in Pune, India. The purified protease showed a single band on native and SDS-PAGE with a molecular weight of 36 kDa on SDS-PAGE. The optimum pH value and temperature range were found to be 8 and 55–60 °C, respectively. The enzyme exhibited broad range of substrate specificity with higher activity for collagen. The enzyme was inhibited with low concentration of Ag2+, Ni2+, and Cu2+. β-Mercaptoethanol was able to inactivate the enzyme at 2.5 mM, suggesting that disulfide bond(s) play a critical role in the enzyme activity. Studies with inhibitors showed that different classes of protease inhibitors, known to inhibit specific proteases, could not inhibit the activity of this protease. Amino acid modification studies data and pKa values showed that Cys, His and Trp were involved in the protease activity. P. aeruginosa PD100 produces one form of protease with some different properties as compared to other reported proteases from P. aeruginosa strains. With respect to properties of the purified protease such as pH optimum, temperature stability with capability to degrade different proteins, high stability in the presences of detergents and chemicals, and metal ions independency, suggesting that it has great potential for different applications.  相似文献   

8.
An intracellular nitrilase was purified from a Fusarium solani O1 culture, in which the enzyme (up to 3000 U L−1) was induced by 2-cyanopyridine. SDS-PAGE revealed one major band corresponding to a molecular weight of approximately 40 kDa. Peptide mass fingerprinting suggested a high similarity of the protein with the putative nitrilase from Gibberella moniliformis. Electron microscopy revealed that the enzyme molecules associated into extended rods. The enzyme showed high specific activities towards benzonitrile (156 U mg−1) and 4-cyanopyridine (203 U mg−1). Other aromatic nitriles (3-chlorobenzonitrile, 3-hydroxybenzonitrile) also served as good substrates for the enzyme. The rates of hydrolysis of aliphatic nitriles (methacrylonitrile, propionitrile, butyronitrile, valeronitrile) were 14–26% of that of benzonitrile. The nitrilase was active within pH 5–10 and at up to 50 °C with optima at pH 8.0 and 40–45 °C. Its activity was strongly inhibited by Hg2+ and Ag+ ions. More than half of the enzyme activity was preserved at up to 50% of n-hexane or n-heptane or at up to 15% of xylene or ethanol. Operational stability of the enzyme was examined by the conversion of 45 mM 4-cyanopyridine in a continuous and stirred ultrafiltration-membrane reactor. The nitrilase half-life was 277 and 10.5 h at 35 and 45 °C, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Characteristics of galactomannanase for degrading konjac gel   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Galactomannanase (Glmnase) is an enzyme product derived from Aspergillus niger. The activity of Glmnase degrading (hydrolyzing) the konjac gel were investigated. Significant loss in the enzyme activity was found when the temperature above 60 °C. Similar observations were obtained when the reaction pH above 5. Further increase in the pH value resulted in entirely loss of enzyme activity at the alkaline pH region (pH 8.0 and above). The optimal hydrolyzing temperature and pH were at 60 °C and 5.0, respectively. For the stability test, the purified Glmnase increased its thermostability up to 70 °C at pH 5.0, but it retained only about 60% activity after 60 min incubation at this temperature and its activity became zero after 20 min incubation at 80 °C. The Glmnase was stable at the pH range from 3.0 to 7.0 at room temperature and retained at least 80% activity for 60 min. For the storage temperature test, the lyophilized Glmnase still conserved about 90% activity during 7 days at 30 °C, and was higher than about 80% at 4 °C. The Km and Vmax, were 0.018 mg/ml konjac powder and 0.20 mg/ml reducing sugar per min, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Alkaline protease production by a newly isolated Bacillus species from laundry soil was studied for detergent biocompatibility. From its morphological and nucleotide sequence (about 1.5 kb) of its 16S rDNA it was identified as Bacillus species with similarity to Bacillus species Y (Gen Bank entry: ABO 55095), and close homology with Bacillus cohnii YN-2000 (Gen Bank entry: ABO23412). Partial purification of the enzyme by ammonium sulfate (50–70% saturation) yielded 8-fold purity. Casein zymography and Sodium dodecylsulphate-Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of the partially purified enzyme revealed two isozymes of molecular sizes approximately 66 kDa and 18 kDa, respectively. The enzyme was most active at pH 12 and 50°C. At pH 12 the enzyme was stable for 5 h and retained 60% activity. The enzyme retained 44% activity at 50°C up to 2 h. The protease showed good hydrolysis specificity with different substrates tested. The presence of Mn2+, Co2+ and ethylenediaminetetracetic acid (EDTA) showed profound increase in protease activity. The protease of Bacillus species Y showed excellent stability and compatibility with three locally available detergents (Kite, Tide and Aerial) up to 3 h retaining almost 70–80% activity and 10–20% activity at room temperature (30°C) and 50°C, respectively, indicating the potential role of this enzyme for detergent application.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we investigated the application of cellulase and protease purified from rumen bacteria as detergent additives. Cellulase and protease were purified from the rumen cellulytic bacteria Fibrobacter succinogenes S85, and Prevotella ruminicola 23, respectively. An inhibitor test indicated that the purified protease belongs to the category of serine proteases and metalloproteases. Both the enzymes were effective at a high temperature (50 degrees C) and neutral pH (pH 7-8), but the protease activity increased with the increase in temperature and pH. The purified protease was treated with ten types of surfactants/detergents; it was found to retain over 60% of its activity in the presence of anionic and nonionic detergents. The cellulose plus protease combination was still effective after treatment with Triton X-100 and Tween 80, but the residual activity was low after treatment with Tween 20 than that after treatment with other nonionic detergents. Washing tests indicated that enzyme addition produced no significant improvement in the removal of grass stains, but individual enzyme addition in surfactants/detergents, especially in nonionic detergents, could improve the washing performance of the detergents by improving its ability to remove blood stains. This suggested that the surfactant/detergent class, enzyme properties, and the mixing ratio of ingredients should be considered simultaneously to enhance the washing performance.  相似文献   

12.
We report on the isolation and biochemical characterization of a novel, cold-active and metagenome-derived lipase with a high stereo-selectivity for pharmaceutically important substrates. The respective gene was isolated from a cosmid library derived from oil contaminated soil and designated lipCE. The deduced aa sequence indicates that the protein belongs to the lipase family l.3, with high similarity to Pseudomonas fluorescens lipases containing a C-terminal secretion signal for ABC dependent transport together with possible motifs for Ca2+-binding sites. The overexpressed protein revealed a molecular weight of 53.2 kDa and was purified by refolding from inclusion bodies after expression in Escherichia coli. The optimum temperature of LipCE was determined to be 30 °C. However, the enzyme still displayed 28% residual activity at 0 °C and 16% at −5 °C. Calcium ions strongly increased activity and thermal stability of the protein. Further detailed biochemical characterization of the recombinant enzyme showed an optimum pH of 7 and that it retained activity in the presence of a range of metal ions and solvents. A detailed analysis of the enzyme's substrate spectrum with more than 34 different substrates indicated that the enzyme was able to hydrolyze a wide variety of substrates including the conversion of long chain fatty acid substrates with maximum activity for pNP-caprate (C10). Furthermore LipCE was able to hydrolyze stereo-selectively ibuprofen-pNP ester with a high preference for the (R) enantiomer of >91% ee and it demonstrated selectivity for esters of primary alcohols, whereas esters of secondary or tertiary alcohols were nearly not converted.  相似文献   

13.
A bleach-stable, thermotolerant, alkaline protease for detergent formulation from a newly isolated Bacillus SB5 is reported. Most (85%) activity of the enzyme was retained in the presence of 10% (v/v) H2O2 and 1% SDS (w/v) at 40°C, after 1 h. The enzyme was optimal at pH 10 and 60°C to 70°C. Enzyme activity was enhanced 30 to 80% in presence of ionic and non-ionic detergents, surfactants and commercial detergents or bleach.  相似文献   

14.
A thermostable, alkaline active xylanase was purified to homogeneity from the culture supernatant of an alkaliphilic Bacillus halodurans S7, which was isolated from a soda lake in the Ethiopian Rift Valley. The molecular weight and the pI of this enzyme were estimated to be around 43 kDa and 4.5, respectively. When assayed at 70 °C, it was optimally active at pH 9.0–9.5. The optimum temperature for the activity was 75 °C at pH 9 and 70 °C at pH 10. The enzyme was stable over a broad pH range and showed good thermal stability when incubated at 65 °C in pH 9 buffer. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by Mn2+. Partial inhibition was also observed in the presence of 5 mM Cu2+, Co2+ and EDTA. Inhibition by Hg2+ and dithiothreitol was insignificant. The enzyme was free from cellulase activity and degraded xylan in an endo-fashion.  相似文献   

15.
Extracellular laccases produced by three different wood-rotting fungi, Cerrena unicolor, Heterobasidion annosum and Trametes versicolor, were immobilized via covalent bonds formation on DEAE-Granocel 500, CM-Granocel 500, and acrylic carriers. Out of the tested carriers, only the DEAE-Granocel 500, which was activated by divinyl sulphone appeared to be a suitable matrix for the expression of enzymic activity. Only one laccase of all the tested enzymes produced by C. unicolor showed the best binding to the carrier and a satisfactory enzymic activity. The immobilized laccase exhibited the highest enzymic activity at pH 5.2 and it was more resistant to thermal denaturation than the native enzyme. At 90 °C, it retained 75% activity compared to the free enzyme. It was also more stable during storage at 4 °C: after 4 months the immobilized laccase retained 98% of initial activity. Immobilized C. unicolor laccase was active in 10–60% concentration of methanol, acetone, isopropanol or acetonitrile. The best enzymic activity was observed in 20% solution of acetonitrile in buffer.  相似文献   

16.
The endogenous protease activity in various commercially available laundry detergents of international companies was studied. The maximum protease activity was found at 50 degrees C in pH range 10.5-11.0 in all the tested laundry detergents. The endogenous protease activity in the tested detergents retained up to 70% on incubation at 40 degrees C for 1 h, whereas less than 30% activity was only found on incubation at 50 degrees C for 1 h. The alkaline protease from an alkalophilic strain of Bacillus cereus was studied for its compatibility in commercial detergents. The cell free fermented broth from shake flask culture of the organism showed maximum activity at pH 10.5 and 50 degrees C. The protease from B. cereus showed much higher residual activity (more than 80%) on incubation with laundry detergents at 50 degrees C for 1 h or longer. The protease enzyme from B. cereus was found to be superior over the endogenous proteases present in the tested commercial laundry detergents in comparison to the enzyme stability during the washing at higher temperature, e.g., 40-50 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of the temperature of growth and carbon source on the production and secretion of β-xylosidase (EC 3.2.1.37) by the thermotolerant fungi Aspergillus fumigatus was studied in submerged cultures. In cultures developed at optimal temperature (30 °C), the enzyme was predominantly cell-bound, while in cultures developed at higher temperature (42 °C), the β-xylosidase activity was predominantly found in the cell-free filtrates. The use of corn cob powder instead of xylan as substrate increased considerably the secretion of enzyme. The highest level of extracellular β-xylosidase (45 U/ml or 360 U/mg protein) was obtained in 3% corn cob cultures grown at 42 °C for 72 h. The partially purified enzyme was active and stable at high temperatures. The presence of high titres of β-xylosidase activity in association with xylanase in the culture filtrates enhanced the efficiency of the pulp hydrolysis process.  相似文献   

18.
An alkaline, SDS-stable protease optimally active at pH 11 from a Bacillus sp. RGR-14 was produced in a complex medium containing soybean meal, starch and calcium carbonate. The protease was active over a wide temperature range of 20–80 °C with major activity between 45 and 70 °C. The protease was completely stable for 1 h in 0.1% SDS and retained 70% of its activity in the presence of 0.5% SDS after 1 h of incubation. The enzyme was active in presence of surfactants (ionic and non-ionic) with 29% enhancement in activity in Tween-85 and was also stable in various oxidizing agents with 100 and 60% activity in presence of 1% sodium perborate and 1% H2O2, respectively. The enzyme was also compatible with commercial detergents (1% w/v) such as Surf, Ariel, Wheel, Fena and Nirma, retaining more than 70% activity in all the detergents after 1 h. Wash performance analysis of grass and blood stains on cotton fabric showed an increase in reflectance (14 and 25% with grass and blood stains, respectively) after enzyme treatment. However, enzyme in conjunction with detergent proved best, with a maximum reflectance change of 46 and 34% for grass and blood stain removal, respectively, at 45 °C. Stain removal was also effective after protease treatment at 25 and 60 °C.  相似文献   

19.
The influence of nonionic surfactants on the activity of a novel thermostable lipase from Bacillus stearothermophilus MC7 was investigated with a view to its potential for synthesis of structured lipids. A large number of modifiers within a broad concentration range were applied. The activity of the enzyme was measured at a relatively high reaction temperature. Highest degree of activation was observed when PEG6000 was applied (up to 2.3-fold increase). Modification essentially changed the performance of the lyophilised preparations—they keep up to 80% of the activity of the native enzyme in the presence of a detergent against 30% in its absence. The effect of sorbitan esters (spans) and polyoxyethylene derivatives of sorbitan esters (tweens) on lipase MC7 was estimated, their HLB value varying within the interval 2.1–16.7. Tweens were strong inhibitors at higher concentrations. For all spans, excepting span 60, an increase of enzyme activity with concentration was observed. All studied additives slow down the process of thermal denaturation. Lipase preparations preserve more than 60% of their activity after 30-min incubation at 75 °C in the presence of tween 60 or PEG4000.  相似文献   

20.
An investigation on the properties of an alkaline protease secreted by Bacillus circulans BM15 strain isolated from a mangrove sediment sample was carried out in order to characterize the enzyme and to test its potency as a detergent additive. The protease was purified to apparent homogeneity by ammonium sulphate precipitation and was a 30-kDa protease as shown by SDS-PAGE and its proteolytic activity was detected by casein zymography. It had optimum activity at pH 7, was stable at alkaline pH range (7 to 11), had optimum temperature of activity 40°C and was stable up to a temperature of 55°C after incubation for one hour. Hg2+, Zn2+, Co2+, and Cu2+completely inhibited the enzyme activity, while Ca2+, Mg2+, K+ and Fe3+ were enhancing the same. The serine protease inhibitor PMSF and metal chelator EDTA inhibited the activity of this protease while the classic metalloprotease inhibitor 1, 10 phenanthroline did not show inhibition. The enzyme was stable in SDS, Triton-X-100 and H2 O2 as well as in various commercial detergents after incubation for one hour. The extracellular production of the enzyme, the pH and temperature stability and stability in presence of oxidants, surfactants and commercial detergents suggest its possible use as a detergent additive.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号