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1.
This study describes the production of xylanases from Aspergillus niveus, A. niger, and A. ochraceus under solid-state fermentation using agro-industrial residues as substrates. Enzyme production was improved using a mixture of wheat bran and yeast extract or peptone. When a mixture of corncob and wheat bran was used, xylanase production from A. niger and A. ochraceus increased by 18%. All cultures were incubated at 30 °C at 70–80% relative humidity for 96 h. For biobleaching assays, 10 or 35 U of xylanase/g dry cellulose pulp were incubated at pH 5.5 for 1 or 2 h, at 55 °C. The delignification efficiency was 20%, the brightness (percentage of ISO) increased two to three points and the viscosity was maintained confirming the absence of cellulolytic activity. These results indicated that the use of xylanases could help to reduce the amount of chlorine compounds used in cellulose pulp treatment.  相似文献   

2.
Aspergillus terricola and Aspergillus ochraceus, isolated from Brazilian soil, were cultivated in Vogel and Adams media supplemented with 20 different carbon sources, at 30 °C, under static conditions, for 120 and 144 h, respectively. High levels of cellulase-free xylanase were produced in birchwood or oat spelt xylan-media. Wheat bran was the most favorable agricultural residue for xylanase production. Maximum activity was obtained at 60 °C and pH 6.5 for A. terricola, and 65 °C and pH 5.0 for A. ochraceus. A. terricola xylanase was stable for 1 h at 60 °C and retained 50% activity after 80 min, while A. ochraceus xylanase presented a t 50 of 10 min. The xylanases were stable in an alkali pH range. Biobleaching of 10 U/g dry cellulose pulp resulted in 14.3% delignification (A. terricola) and 36.4% (A. ochraceus). The brightness was 2.4–3.4% ISO higher than the control. Analysis in SEM showed defibrillation of the microfibrils. Arabinase traces and β-xylosidase were detected which might act synergistically with xylanase.  相似文献   

3.
Direct utilization of untreated oil palm trunk (OPT) for cellulases and xylanase production by Aspergillus fumigatus SK1 was conducted under solid-state fermentation (SSF). The highest activities of extracellular cellulases and xylanases were produced at 80% moisture level, initial pH 5.0, 1 × 108 spore/g (inoculum) with 125 μm of OPT as sole carbon source. The cellulases and xylanase activities obtained were 54.27, 3.36, 4.54 and 418.70 U/g substrates for endoglucanase (CMCase), exoglucanase (FPase), β-glucosidase and xylanase respectively. The crude cellulases and xylanase required acidic condition to retain their optimum activities (pH 4.0). Crude cellulases and xylanase were more stable at 40 °C compared to their optimum activities conditions (60 °C for FPase and 70 °C for CMCase, β-glucosidase and xylanase). SDS-PAGE and zymogram analysis showed that Aspergillus fumigatus SK1 could secrete cellulases (endoglucanase, exoglucanase and β-glucosidase), xylanase and protease. Enzymatic degradation of alkaline treated OPT with concentrated crude cellulases and xylanases resulted in producing polyoses.  相似文献   

4.
Xylanase production by seven fungal strains was investigated using concentrated spent sulphite liquor (SSLc), xylan and d-xylose as carbon substrates. An SSLc-based medium induced xylanase production at varying levels in all of these strains, with Aspergillus oryzae NRRL 3485 and Aspergillus phoenicis ATCC 13157 yielding activities of 164 and 146 U ml−1, respectively; these values were higher than those obtained on xylan or d-xylose with the same fungal strains. The highest xylanase activity of 322 U ml−1 was obtained with Aspergillus foetidus ATCC 14916 on xylan. Electrophoretic and zymogram analysis indicated three xylanases from A. oryzae with molecular weights of approximately 32, 22 and 19 kDa, whereas A. phoenicis produced two xylanases with molecular weights of about 25 and 21 kDa. Crude xylanase preparations from these A. oryzae and A. phoenicis strains exhibited optimal activities at pH 6.5 and 5.0 and at 65 and 55°C, respectively. The A. oryzae xylanolytic activity was stable at 50°C over the pH range 4.5–10. The crude xylanase preparations from these A. oryzae and A. phoenicis strains had negligible cellulase activity, and their application in the biobleaching of hardwood pulp reduced chlorine dioxide consumption by 20–30% without sacrificing brightness.  相似文献   

5.
A glucoamylase from Aspergillus niveus was produced by submerged fermentation in Khanna medium, initial pH 6.5 for 72 h, at 40°C. The enzyme was purified by DEAE-Fractogel and Concanavalin A-Sepharose chromatography. The enzyme showed 11% carbohydrate content, an isoelectric point of 3.8 and a molecular mass of 77 and 76 kDa estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis or Bio-Sil-Sec-400 gel filtration, respectively. The pH optimum was 5.0–5.5, and the enzyme remained stable for at least 2 h in the pH range of 4.0–9.5. The temperature optimum was 65°C and retained 100% activity after 240 min at 60°C. The glucoamylase remained completely active in the presence of 10% methanol and acetone. After 120 min hydrolysis of starch, glucose was the unique product formed, confirming that the enzyme was a glucoamylase (1,4-alpha-d-glucan glucohydrolase). The K m was calculated as 0.32 mg ml−1. Circular dichroism spectroscopy estimated a secondary structure content of 33% α-helix, 17% β-sheet and 50% random structure, which is similar to that observed in the crystal structures of glucoamylases from other Aspergillus species. The tryptic peptide sequence analysis showed similarity with glucoamylases from A. niger, A. kawachi, A. ficcum, A. terreus, A. awamori and A. shirousami. We conclude that the reported properties, such as solvent, pH and temperature stabilities, make A. niveus glucoamylase a potentially attractive enzyme for biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

6.
A complete gene, xyl10C, encoding a thermophilic endo-1,4-β-xylanase (XYL10C), was cloned from the acidophilic fungus Bispora sp. MEY-1 and expressed in Pichia pastoris. XYL10C shares highest nucleotide and amino acid sequence identities of 57.3 and 49.7%, respectively, with a putative xylanase from Aspergillus fumigatus Af293 of glycoside hydrolase family 10. A high expression level in P. pastoris (73,400 U ml−1) was achieved in a 3.7–l fermenter. The purified recombinant XYL10C was thermophilic, exhibiting maximum activity at 85°C, which is higher than that reported from any fungal xylanase. The enzyme was also highly thermostable, exhibiting ~100% of the initial activity after incubation at 80°C for 60 min and >87% of activity at 90°C for 10 min. The half lives of XYL10C at 80 and 85°C were approximately 45 and 3 h, respectively. It had two activity peaks at pH 3.0 and 4.5–5.0 (maximum), respectively, and was very acid stable, retaining more than 80% activity after incubation at pH 1.5−6.0 for 1 h. The enzyme was resistant to Co2+, Mn2+, Cr3+ and Ag+. The specific activity of XYL10C for oat spelt xylan was 18,831 U mg−1. It also had wide substrate specificity and produced simple products (65.1% xylose, 25.0% xylobiose and 9.9% xylan polymer) from oat spelt xylan.  相似文献   

7.
The purpose of this study was to produce a Trichoderma reesei xylanase (XYN2) in Pichia pastoris and to test its potential application for pulp bleaching. The recombinant xylanase was purified by a two-step process of ultrafiltration and gel filtration chromatography. The molecular mass of the recombinant enzyme was 21 and 25 kDa by SDS–PAGE analysis, due to different glycosylation of the native protein. The optimum pH and temperature of the recombinant XYN2 was 5.0 and 50 °C. Enzyme activity was stable at 50 °C and at pH 5.0–7.0. The bleaching ability of the recombinant xylanase was also studied at 50 °C and pH 6.0, using wheat straw pulp. Biobleaching of the xylanase produced chlorine dioxide savings of up to 60%, while retaining brightness at the control level and led to a lower kappa number and small enhancements in tensile, burst and tear strength of pulp fibers.  相似文献   

8.
Delignification efficacy of xylanases to facilitate the consequent chemical bleaching of Kraft pulps has been studied widely. In this work, an alkaline and thermally stable cellulase-less xylanase, derived from a xylanolytic Bacillus subtilis, has been purified by a combination of gel filtration and Q-Sepharose chromatography to its homogeneity. Molecular weight of the purified xylanase was 61 kDa by SDS–PAGE. The purified enzyme revealed an optimum assay temperature and pH of 60°C and 8.0, respectively. Xylanase was active in the pH range of 6.0–9.0 and stable up to 70°C. Divalent ions like Ca2+, Mg2+ and Zn2+ enhanced xylanase activity, whereas Hg2+, Fe2+, and Cu2+ were inhibitory to xylanase at 2 mM concentration. It showed K m and V max values of 9.5 mg/ml and 53.6 μmol/ml/min, respectively, using birchwood xylan as a substrate. Xylanase exhibited higher values of turn over number (K cat) and catalytic efficiency (K cat/K m) with birchwood xylan than oat spelt xylan. Bleach-boosting enzyme activity at 30 U/g dry pulp displayed the optimum bio-delignification of Kraft pulp resulting in 26.5% reduction in kappa number and 18.5% ISO induction in brightness at 55°C after 3 h treatment. The same treatment improved the pulp properties including tensile strength and burst index, demonstrating its potential application in pre-bleaching of Kraft pulp.  相似文献   

9.
An environmentally sound biobleaching to get high quality paper pulp from mixed wood pulp was attempted employing laccase from Aspergillus fumigatus VkJ2.4.5 for lignin removal. Laccase treatment was performed in the presence of a mediator N-hydroxybenzotriazole (HBT, 1.5% w/w), resulting into notably higher level of delignification of the pulp. Enzyme at 10 Ug−1 of pulp at 50°C, pH 6.0, for 2 h with a pulp consistency of 10% was found suitable for enabling maximum decrease in the kappa number. The kappa number and yellowness decreased by 14 and 4% whereas ISO brightness improved by 7%. The presence of a characteristic peak at 280 nm indicated the presence of lignin in the effluent during biobleaching. Analysis of FTIR spectra of residual lignin revealed characteristic modifications following enzymatic bleaching by laccase mediator system (LMS). Variations in morphology and crystallinity of pulp were evaluated by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis.  相似文献   

10.
Solid-state fermentation obtained from different and low-cost carbon sources was evaluated to endocellulases and endoxylanases production by Aspergillus japonicus C03. Regarding the enzymatic production the highest levels were observed at 30 °C, using soy bran added to crushed corncob or wheat bran added to sugarcane bagasse, humidified with salt solutions, and incubated for 3 days (xylanase) or 6 days (cellulase) with 70% relative humidity. Peptone improved the xylanase and cellulase activities in 12 and 29%, respectively. The optimum temperature corresponded to 60 °C and 50–55 °C for xylanase and cellulase, respectively, both having 4.0 as optimum pH. Xylanase was fully stable up to 40 °C, which is close to the rumen temperature. The enzymes were stable in pH 4.0–7.0. Cu++ and Mn++ increased xylanase and cellulase activities by 10 and 64%, respectively. A. japonicus C03 xylanase was greatly stable in goat rumen fluid for 4 h during in vivo and in vitro experiments.  相似文献   

11.
A xylanase gene, xynE2, was cloned from thermoalkaline Anoxybacillus sp. E2 and was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3). The gene consisted of 987 bp and encoded a 328-residue xylanase with a calculated molecular weight of 38.8 kDa. On the basis of amino acid sequence similarities, this enzyme was assigned as a member of glycoside hydrolase family 10. Purified recombinant XynE2 showed maximal activity at pH 7.8 and 65°C, and was thermostable at 60°C. The enzyme was highly active and stable over a broad pH range, showing more than 90% of maximal activity at pH 6.6–pH 8.6 and retaining more than 80% of activity at pH 4.6–pH 12.0, 37°C for 1 h, respectively. These favorable properties make XynE2 a good candidate in the pulp and paper industries. This is the first report on gene cloning, expression and characterization of a xylanase from the genus Anoxybacillus.  相似文献   

12.
The xylanase gene xyn II from Aspergillus usamii E001 was placed under the control of an alcohol oxidase promoter (AOX1) in the plasmid pPIC9K and integrated into the genome of a methylotrophic yeast, P. pastoris GS115, by electroporation. His+ transformants were screened for on the basis of their resistance to G418 and activity assay. A transformant, P. pastoris GSC12, which showed resistance to over 6 mg G418/ml and highest xylanase activity was selected. Recombinant xylanase was secreted by P. pastoris GSC12 24 h after methanol induction of shake-flask cultures, and reached a final yield of 3139. About 68 U/mg 120 h after the induction. The molecular mass of this xylanase was estimated to be 21 kDa by SDS-PAGE. The optimum pH and temperature were 4.2 and 50 °C, respectively. Xylanase was stable below 50 °C and within pH 3.0–7.0. Its activity was increased by EDTA and Co2+ ion and strongly inhibited by Mn2+, Li+ and Ag+ ions. The K m and V max values with birchwood xylan as the substrate were found to be 5.56 mg/ml and 216 μmol/mg/min, respectively. This is the first report on expression and characterization of xylanase from A. usamii in P. pastoris. The hydrolysis products consisted of xylooligosaccharides together with a small amount of xylose. This property made the enzyme attractive for industrial purposes, as relatively pure xylooligosaccharides could be obtained.  相似文献   

13.
The novel fungus Aspergillus niveus RS2 isolated from rice straw showed relatively high xylanase production after 5 days of fermentation. Of the different xylan-containing agricultural by-products tested, rice husk was the best substrate; however, maximum xylanase production occurred when the organism was cultured on purified xylan. Yeast extract was found to be the best nitrogen source for xylanase production, followed by ammonium sulfate and peptone. The optimum pH for maximum enzyme production was 8 (18.2 U/ml); however, an appreciable level of activity was obtained at pH 7 (10.9 U/ml). Temperature and pH optima for xylanase were 50°C and 7.0, respectively; however the enzyme retained considerably high activity under high temperature (12.1 U/ml at 60°C) and high alkaline conditions (17.2 U/ml at pH 8 and 13.9 U/ml at pH 9). The enzyme was strongly inhibited by Hg2+, while Mn2+ was slight activator. The half-life of the enzyme was 48 min at 50°C. The enzyme was purified by 5.08-fold using carboxymethyl-sephadex chromatography. Zymogram analysis suggested the presence of a single candidate xylanase in the purified preparation. SDS-PAGE revealed a molecular weight of approximately 22.5 kDa. The enzyme had K m and V max values of 2.5 and 26 μmol/mg per minute, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Twenty Aspergillus strains were evaluated for production of extracellular cellulolytic and xylanolytic activities. Aspergillus brasiliensis, A. niger and A. japonicus produced the highest xylanase activities with the A. brasiliensis and A. niger strains producing thermostable β-xylosidases. The β-xylosidase activities of the A. brasiliensis and A. niger strains had similar temperature and pH optima at 75°C and pH 5 and retained 62% and 99%, respectively, of these activities over 1 h at 60°C. At 75°C, these values were 38 and 44%, respectively. Whereas A. niger is a well known enzyme producer, this is the first report of xylanase and thermostable β-xylosidase production from the newly identified, non-ochratoxin-producing species A. brasiliensis.  相似文献   

15.
Three endoxylanase genes were cloned from the thermophilic fungus Chaetomium thermophilum CBS 730.95. All genes contained the typical consensus sequence of family 11 glycoside hydrolases. Genomic copies of Ct xyn11A, Ct xyn11B, and Ct xyn11C were expressed in the filamentous fungus T. reesei under the control of the strong T. reesei cel7A (cellobiohydrolase 1, cbh1) promoter. The molecular masses of the Ct Xyn11A, Ct Xyn11B, and Ct Xyn11C proteins on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) were 27, 23, and 22 kDa, respectively. Ct Xyn11A was produced almost as efficiently as the homologous xylanase II from a corresponding single-copy transformant strain. Ct Xyn11B production level was approximately half of that of Ct Xyn11A. The amount of Ct Xyn11C was remarkably lower. Ct Xyn11A had the highest temperature optimum and stability of the recombinant xylanases and the highest activity at acid-neutral pH (pH 5–7). It was the most suitable for industrial bleaching of kraft pulp at high temperature.  相似文献   

16.
Fungi producing xylanases are plentiful but alkali-thermo-tolerant fungi producing cellulase-poor xylanase are rare. Out of 12 fungal strains isolated from various sources, Coprinellus disseminatus SW-1 NTCC 1165 yielded the highest xylanase activity (362.1 IU/ml) with minimal cellulase contamination (0.64 IU/ml). The solid state fermentation was more effective yielding 88.59% higher xylanase activity than that of submerged fermentation. An incubation period of 7 days at 37°C and pH 6.4 accelerated the xylanase production up to the maximum level. Among various inexpensive agro-residues used as carbon source, wheat bran induced the maximum xylanase titres (469.45 IU/ml) while soya bean meal was the best nitrogen source (478.5 IU/ml). A solid substrate to moisture content ratio of 1:3 was suitable for xylanase production while xylanase titre was repressed with the addition of glucose and lactose. The xylanase and laccase activities under optimized conditions were 499.60 and 25.5 IU/ml, respectively along with negligible cellulase contamination (0.86 IU/ml). Biochemical characterization revealed that optimal xylanase activity was observed at pH 6.4 and temperature 55°C and xylanase is active up to pH 9 (40.33 IU/ml) and temperature 85°C (48.81 IU/ml). SDS–PAGE and zymogram analysis indicated that molecular weight of alkali-thermo-tolerant xylanase produced by C. disseminatus SW-1 NTCC 1165 was 43 kDa.  相似文献   

17.
A new xylanase from a Trichoderma harzianum strain   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A new xylanase (XYL2) was purified from solid-state cultures of Trichoderma harzianum strain C by ultrafiltration and gel filtration. SDS-PAGE of the xylanase showed an apparent homogeneity and molecular weight of 18 kDa. It had the highest activity at pH 5.0 and 45°C and was stable at 50°C and pH 5.0 up to 4 h xylanase. XYL2 had a low K m with insoluble oat spelt xylan as substrate. Compared to the amino acid composition of xylanases from Trichoderma spp, xylanase XYL2 presented a high content of glutamate/glutamine, phenylalanine and cysteine, and a low content of serine. Xylanase XYL2 improved the delignification and selectivity of unbleached hardwood kraft pulp. Received 02 February 1999/ Accepted in revised form 17 April 1999  相似文献   

18.
A xylanase gene xyn10A was isolated from the human gut bacterium Bacteroides xylanisolvens XB1A and the gene product was characterized. Xyn10A is a 40-kDa xylanase composed of a glycoside hydrolase family 10 catalytic domain with a signal peptide. A recombinant His-tagged Xyn10A was produced in Escherichia coli and purified. It was active on oat spelt and birchwood xylans and on wheat arabinoxylans. It cleaved xylotetraose, xylopentaose, and xylohexaose but not xylobiose, clearly indicating that Xyn10A is a xylanase. Surprisingly, it showed a low activity against carboxymethylcellulose but no activity at all against aryl-cellobioside and cellooligosaccharides. The enzyme exhibited K m and V max of 1.6 mg ml−1 and 118 μmol min−1 mg−1 on oat spelt xylan, and its optimal temperature and pH for activity were 37°C and pH 6.0, respectively. Its catalytic properties (k cat/K m = 3,300 ml mg−1 min−1) suggested that Xyn10A is one of the most active GH10 xylanase described to date. Phylogenetic analyses showed that Xyn10A was closely related to other GH10 xylanases from human Bacteroides. The xyn10A gene was expressed in B. xylanisolvens XB1A cultured with glucose, xylose or xylans, and the protein was associated with the cells. Xyn10A is the first family 10 xylanase characterized from B. xylanisolvens XB1A.  相似文献   

19.
Melanocarpus albomyces, a thermophilic fungus isolated from compost by enrichment culture in a liquid medium containing sugarcane bagasse, produced cellulase-free xylanase in culture medium. The fungus was unusual in that xylanase activity was inducible not only by hemicellulosic material but also by the monomeric pentosan unit of xylan but not by glucose. Concentration of bagasse-grown culture filtrate protein followed by size-exclusion and anion-exchange chromatography separated four xylanase activities. Under identical conditions of protein purification, xylanase I was absent in the xylose-grown culture filtrate. Two xylanase activities, a minor xylanase IA and a major xylanase IIIA, were purified to apparent homogeneity from bagasse-grown cultures. Both xylanases were specific forβ-1,4 xylose-rich polymer, optimally active, respectively, at pH 6.6 and 5.6, and at 65°C. The xylanases were stable between pH 5 to 10 at 50°C for 24 h. Xylanases released xylobiose, xylotriose and higher oligomers from xylans from different sources. Xylanase IA had a Mr of 38 kDa and contained 7% carbohydrate whereas xylanase IIIA had a Mr of 24 kDa and no detectable carbohydrate. The Km for larchwood xylan (mg ml−1) and Vmax (μmol xylose min−1 mg−1 protein) of xylanase IA were 0.33 and 311, and of xylanase IIIA 1.69 and 500, respectively. Xylanases IA, II and IIIA showed no synergism in the hydrolysis of larchwood glucuronoxylan or oat spelt and sugarcane bagasse arabinoxylans. They had different reactivity on untreated and delignified bagasse. The xylanases were more reactive than cellulase on delignified bagasse. Simultaneous treatment of delignified bagasse by xylanase and cellulase released more sugar than individual enzyme treatments. By contrast, the primary cell walls of a plant, particularly from the region of elongation, were more susceptible to the action of cellulase than xylanase. The effects of xylanase and cellulase on plant cell walls were consistent with the view that hemicellulose surrounds cellulose in plant cell walls.  相似文献   

20.
Aspergillus fumigatus andA. oryzae were cultivated in laboratory fermenters on media containing xylan as the main carbon source.A. fumigatus produced xylanase on unsubstituted, insoluble beech xylan but growth and enzyme production on soluble xylo-oligosaccharides from the steaming of hardwood were poor due to the presence of inhibitors. An essential prerequisite for good xylanase production byA. fumigatus was decrease in the pH of the cultivation below 3.0 At higher pH values, the production of proteolytic enzymes caused degradation of the xylanase activity already produced.A. oryzae produced rather less xylanase activity thanA. fumigatus on the beech xylan medium but, after adaptation, was capable of efficient enzyme production on the steamed substrate.M.J. Bailey and L. Viikari are with the VTT, Biotechnical Laboratory, PO Box 202, SF-02151 Espoo, Finland  相似文献   

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