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1.
An xylanase producing alkaliphilic Micrococcus sp was isolated from an alkaline soda lake. Xylose and xylan induced enzyme production but no activity was detected when it was grown using other carbohydrate sources. The level of xylanase production was higher in the presence of xylose than in the presence of xylan. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity and its molecular weight was estimated to be 56 kD on SDS-PAGE. The optimum temperature and pH for xylanase activity were 55°C and 7.5–9.0, respectively. Sixty per cent of the maximum activity was displayed at pH 11. The enzyme was very stable in the pH range of 6.5–10 and up to a temperature of 40°C. Xylanase activity was inhibited by Cu2+ and Hg2+. Received 03 October 1997/ Accepted in revised form 03 February 1998  相似文献   

2.
Highly thermostable β-xylanase produced by newly isolated Thermomyces lanuginosus THKU-49 strain was purified in a four-step procedure involving ammonium sulfate precipitation and subsequent separation on a DEAE-Sepharose fast flow column, hydroxylapatite column, and Sephadex G-100 column, respectively. The enzyme purified to homogeneity had a specific activity of 552 U/mg protein and a molecular weight of 24.9 kDa. The optimal temperature of the purified xylanase was 70°C, and it was stable at temperatures up to 60°C at pH 6.0; the optimal pH was 5.0–7.0, and it was stable in the pH range 3.5–8.0 at 4°C. Xylanase activity was inhibited by Mn2+, Sn2+, and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. The xylanase showed a high activity towards soluble oat spelt xylan, but it exhibited low activity towards insoluble oat spelt xylan; no activity was found to carboxymethylcellulose, avicel, filter paper, locust bean gum, cassava starch, and p-nitrophenyl β-d-xylopyranoside. The apparent K m value of the xylanase on soluble oat spelt xylan and insoluble oat spelt xylan was 7.3 ± 0.236 and 60.2 ± 6.788 mg/ml, respectively. Thin-layer chromatography analysis showed that the xylanase hydrolyzed oat spelt xylan to yield mainly xylobiose and xylose as end products, but that it could not release xylose from the substrate xylobiose, suggesting that it is an endo-xylanase.  相似文献   

3.
The objective of this work was to apply low cost materials, agricultural residues, to the purification of xylanase. The results showed that crude extracellular, cellulase-free xylanase of an alkaliphilic Bacillus sp. strain K-8 could be purified in a single step by affinity adsorption–desorption on a corn husk column using a high flow rate, under the conditions 25 mM acetate buffer, pH 4.0, 4 °C, which prevented the hydrolysis of xylan by xylanase. After adsorption, the xylanase was eluted from the enzyme–corn husk complex with 500 mM Urea. The enzyme was purified 5.3-fold to homogeneity from culture supernatant. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was 24 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The specific activity and recovery yield after purification were 25.4 U/mg protein and 42.3%, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Xylanase from Scytalidium thermophilum was immobilized on Eudragit L-100, a pH sensitive copolymer of methacrylic acid and methyl methacrylate. The enzyme was non-covalently immobilized and the system expressed 70% xylanase activity. The immobilized preparation had broader optimum temperature of activity between 55 and 65 °C as compared to 65 °C in case of free enzyme and broader optimum pH between 6.0 and 7.0 as compared to 6.5 in case of free enzyme. Immobilization increased the t1/2 of enzyme at 60 °C from 15 to 30 min with a stabilization factor of 2. The Km and Vmax values for the immobilized and free xylanase were 0.5% xylan and 0.89 μmol/ml/min and 0.35% xylan and 1.01 μmol/ml/min respectively. An Arrhenius plot showed an increased value of activation energy for immobilized xylanase (227 kcal/mol) as compared to free xylanase (210 kcal/mol) confirming the higher temperature stability of the free enzyme. Enzymatic saccharification of xylan was also improved by xylanase immobilization.  相似文献   

5.
A xylanase gene (xyn10) from alkaliphilic Bacillus sp. N16-5 was cloned and expressed in Pichia pastoris. The deduced amino acid sequence has 85% identity with xylanase xyn10A from B. halodurans and contains two potential N-glycosylation sites. The glycosylated Xyn10 with MW 48 kDa can hydrolyze birchwood and oatspelt xylan. The enzyme had optimum activity at pH 7 and 70°C, with the specific activity of 92.5U/mg. The Xyn10 retained over 90% residual activity at 60°C for 30 min but lost all activity at 80°C over 15 min. Most tested ions showed no or slight inhibition effects on enzyme activity.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Xylanase is one of the most important hemicellulases in industry. However, its low thermostability limits its applications. In this study, one thermostable xylanase-producing strain 400264 was obtained from screening 11 Aspergillus niger strains (producing thermotolerant xylanase), and the optimum temperature of crude xylanase extracted from it was 55°C. Original activity of the crude xylanase is 64% at 60°C and 55% at 85°C with an incubation time of 30 min, respectively. After the expression of recombinant xylanase gene (xynA/xynB), the XYNB (xylanase B) showed higher thermostability than XYNA (xylanase A). Recombinant enzyme XYNB retained 94% of its activity for 10 min at 85°C, while XYNA with no activity left. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed to replace Ala33 of XYNB by Ser33 resulting 19% decrease in enzyme activity after incubating at 85°C for 30 min. It suggested that the Ala33 residue may have a certain effect on the thermophilic adaptation of xylanase.  相似文献   

8.
Bacillus sp. NTU-06 was used to produce xylanase, which is an important industrial enzyme used in the pulp and paper industry. The enzyme was purified by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) and had a molecular mass of 24 kDa. The enzyme was active over a concentration range of 0–20% sodium chloride in culture broth, although its activity was optimal in 5% sodium chloride. A salinity stability test showed that 43% of the enzyme activity was retained after 4 h in 20% sodium chloride. Xylanase activity was maximal at pH 8.0 and 40°C. The enzyme was somewhat thermostable, retaining 20% of the original activity after incubation at 70°C for 4 h. The xylanase had Km and Vmax values of 3.45 mg mL−1 and 387.3 µmol min−1mg−1, respectively. The deduced internal amino acid sequence of Bacillus sp. NTU-06 xylanase resembled the sequence of beta-1,4-endoxylanase, which is a member of glycoside hydrolase family 11. Some of the novel characteristics that make this enzyme potentially effective in xylan biodegradation are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
AIMS: The enzymatic hydrolysis of xylan has potential economic and environment-friendly applications. Therefore, attention is focused here on the discovery of new extremophilic xylanase in order to meet the requirements of industry. METHODS AND RESULTS: An extracellular xylanase was purified from the culture filtrate of P. citrinum grown on wheat bran bed in solid substrate fermentation. Single step purification was achieved using hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The purified enzyme showed a single band on SDS-PAGE with an apparent molecular weight of c. 25 kDa and pI of 3.6. Stimulation of the activity by beta mercaptoethanol, dithiotheritol (DTT) and cysteine was observed. Moderately thermostable xylanase showed optimum activity at 50 degrees C at pH 8.5. CONCLUSION: Xylanase purified from P. citrinum was alkaliphilic and moderately thermostable in nature. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The present work reports for the first time the purification and characterization of a novel endoglucanase free alkaliphilic xylanase from the alkali tolerant fungus Penicillium citrinum. The alkaliphilicity and moderate thermostability of this xylanase may have potential implications in paper and pulp industries.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of xylanolytic enzymes produced by Aspergillus fumigatus RP04 and Aspergillus niveus RP05 to promote the biobleaching of cellulose pulp was investigated. Both fungi grew for 4–5 days in liquid medium at 40°C, under static conditions. Xylanase production was tested using different carbon sources, including some types of xylans. A. fumigatus produced high levels of xylanase on agricultural residues (corncob or wheat bran), whereas A. niveus produced more xylanase on birchwood xylan. The optimum temperature of the xylanases from A. fumigatus and A. niveus was around 60–70°C. The enzymes were stable for 30 min at 60°C, maintaining 95–98% of the initial activity. After 1 h at this temperature, the xylanase from A. niveus still retained 85% of initial activity, while the xylanase from A. fumigatus was only 40% active. The pH optimum of the xylanases was acidic (4.5–5.5). The pH stability for the xylanase from A. fumigatus was higher at pH 6.0–8.0, while the enzyme from A. niveus was more stable at pH 4.5–6.5. Crude enzymatic extracts were used to clarify cellulose pulp and the best result was obtained with the A. niveus preparation, showing kappa efficiency around 39.6% as compared to only 11.7% for that of A. fumigatus.  相似文献   

12.
Xylanase production in solid-state fermentation: a study of its properties   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Summary Xylanase production by Aspergillus niger van Tieghem was studied in solid-state cultivation. The screening of substrates was carried out in column incubators aerated with humidified air at 30°C. Results of physiological studies showed that the best yield of xylanase was 2500 U/g dry matter on a mixture of straw+bran 1:1 at 70% of moisture content.In order to compare some properties of the xylanase produced in both liquid and solid cultures, A. niger was also grown on xylan in submerged cultures. The enzymes produced in solid and liquid cultures have an optimum pH of about 3.8 and 4.5, respectively. Xylanase synthetized in solid fermentation is a little more thermostable than that from liquid culture and is maximally active at 50° C, compared to 45° C for enzyme from liquid culture.  相似文献   

13.
We studied heterologous expression of xylanase 11A gene of Chaetomium thermophilum in Pichia pastoris and characterized the thermostable nature of the purified gene product. For this purpose, the xylanase 11A gene of C. thermophilum was cloned in P. pastoris GS115 under the control of AOX1 promoter. The maximum extracellular activity of recombinant xylanase (xyn698: gene with intron) was 15.6 U ml−1 while that of recombinant without intron (xyn669) was 1.26 U ml−1 after 96 h growth. The gene product was purified apparently to homogeneity level. The optimum temperature of pure recombinant xylanase activity was 70°C and the enzyme retained its 40.57% activity after incubation at 80°C for 10 min. It exhibited quite lower demand of activation energy, enthalpy, Gibbs free energy, entropy, and xylan binding energy during substrate hydrolysis than that required by that of the donor, thus indicating its thermostable nature. pH-dependent catalysis showed that it was quite stable in a pH range of 5.5–8.5. This revealed that gene was successfully processed in Ppastoris and remained heat stable and may qualify for its potential use in paper and pulp and animal feed applications.  相似文献   

14.
This study presents data on the production, purification, and properties of a thermostable β-xylanase produced by an Aspergillus awamori 2B.361 U2/1 submerged culture using wheat bran as carbon source. Fractionation of the culture filtrate by membrane ultrafiltration followed by Sephacryl S-200 and Q-Sepharose chromatography allowed for the isolation of a homogeneous xylanase (PXII-1), which was 32.87 kDa according to MS analysis. The enzyme-specific activity towards soluble oat spelt xylan, which was found to be 490 IU/mg under optimum reaction conditions (50°C and pH 5.0–5.5), was 17-fold higher than that measured in the culture supernatant. Xylan reaction products were identified as xylobiose, xylotriose, and xylotetraose. K m values (mg ml−1) for soluble oat spelt and birchwood xylan were 11.8 and 9.45, respectively. Although PXII-1 showed 85% activity retention upon incubation at 50°C and pH 5.0 for 20 days, incubation at pH 7.0 resulted in 50% activity loss within 3 days. PXII-1 stability at pH 7.0 was improved in the presence of 20 mM cysteine, which allowed for 85% activity retention for 25 days. This study on the production in high yields of a remarkably thermostable xylanase is of significance due to the central role that this class of biocatalyst shares, along with cellulases, for the much needed enzymatic hydrolysis of biomass. Furthermore, stable xylanases are important for the manufacture of paper, animal feed, and xylooligosaccharides.  相似文献   

15.
Xylanase, β-glucosidase, β-xylosidase, endoglucanase and polygalacturonase production fromCurvularia inaequalis was carried out by means of solid-state and submerged fermentation using different carbon sources. β-Glucosidase. β-xylosidase, polygalacturonase and xylanase produced by the microorganisms were characterized. β-Glucosidase presented optimum activity at pH 5.5 whereas xylanase, poly-galacturonase and β-xylosidase activities were optimal at pH 5.0. Maximal activity of β-glucosidase was determined at 60°C, β-xylosidase at 70°C, and polygalacturonase and xylanase at 55°C. These enzymes were stable at acidic to neutral pH and at 40–45 °C. The crude enzyme solution was studied for the hydrolysis of agricultural residues.  相似文献   

16.
Streptomyces sp. QG-11-3, which produces a cellulase-free thermostable xylanase (96 IU ml−1) and a pectinase (46 IU ml−1), was isolated on Horikoshi medium supplemented with 1% w/v wheat bran. Carbon sources that favored xylanase production were rice bran (82 IU ml−1) and birch-wood xylan (81 IU ml−1); pectinase production was also stimulated by pectin and cotton seed cake (34 IU ml−1 each). The partially purified xylanase and pectinase were optimally active at 60°C. Both enzymes were 100% stable at 50°C for more than 24 h. The half-lives of xylanase and pectinase at 70, 75 and 80°C were 90, 75 and 9 min, and 90, 53 and 7 min, respectively. The optimum pH values for xylanase and pectinase were 8.6 and 3.0, respectively, at 60°C. Xylanase and pectinase were stable over a broad pH range between 5.4 and 9.4 and 2.0 to 9.0, respectively, retaining more than 85% of their activity. Ca2+ stimulated the activity of both enzymes up to 7%, whereas Cd2+, Co2+, Cr3+, iodoacetic acid and iodoacetamide inhibited xylanase up to 35% and pectinase up to 63%; at 1 mM, Hg2+ inhibited both enzymes completely. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2000) 24, 396–402. Received 29 September 1999/ Accepted in revised form 02 February 2000  相似文献   

17.
Xylanase production by the Antarctic psychrophilic yeast Cryptococcus adeliae was increased 4.3 fold by optimizing the culture medium composition using statistical designs. The optimized medium containing 24.2 g l−1 xylan and 10.2 g l−1 yeast extract and having an initial pH of 7.5 yielded xylanase activity at 400 nkat (nanokatal) ml−1 after 168-h shake culture at 4°C. In addition, very little endoglucanase, β-mannanase, β-xylosidase, β-glucosidase, α-l-arabinofuranosidase, and no filter paper cellulase activities were detected. Among 12 carbon sources tested, maximum xylanase activity was induced by xylan, followed by lignocelluloses such as steamed wheat straw and alkali-treated bagasse. The level of enzyme activity produced on other carbon sources appeared to be constitutive. Among the complex organic nitrogen sources tested, the xylanase activity was most enhanced by yeast extract, followed by soymeal, Pharmamedia (cotton seed protein), and Alburex (potato protein). A batch culture at 10°C in a 5-l fermenter (3.5-1 working volume) using the optimized medium gave 385 nkat at 111 h of cultivation. The crude xylanase showed optimal activity at pH 5.0–5.5 and good stability at pH 4–9 (21 h at 4°C). Although the enzyme was maximally active at 45°–50°C, it appeared very thermolabile, showing a half-life of 78 min at 35°C. At 40°–50°C, it lost 71%–95% activity within 5 min. This is the first report on the production as well as on the properties of thermolabile xylanase produced by an Antarctic yeast. Received: December 10, 1999 / Accepted: March 23, 2000  相似文献   

18.
A xylanase producer, Bacillus pumilus SB-M13, was isolated from soil and identified using various tests based on carbohydrate fermentation preferences and fatty acid analysis. Xylanase gene, isolated using PCR amplification, was partially sequenced and it showed 89–94% sequence similarity to the xylanase genes of other B. pumilus strains. Xylanase with very low level of cellulase was produced on agricultural byproducts. The enzyme has been purified 186-fold by hydrophobic interaction chromatography and biochemically characterized. It has a molecular weight of 24.8 kDa and pI of 9.2. Xylanolytic activity is stable at alkaline pH and highest activity is observed at 60 °C and pH 7.5. Enzyme K m and k cat values were determined as 1.9 mg/mL and 42,600 U/mg, respectively. In aqueous-two-phase system, xylanase always partitioned to the top phase. Basic pH, low PEG concentration, salt addition, and presence of microbial cells enhanced xylanase partitioning. A maximum sevenfold purification, 10-fold concentration and 100% xylanase recovery were obtained, separately, by adjusting system parameters. A fourfold concentrated xylanase was obtained with 70% enzyme recovery only in one step ATPS process without cell harvesting.  相似文献   

19.
A mesophilic fungal strain Y-94 produced three types of thermostable endo-xylanases accompanied by the formation of a large amount of cellulase. These xylanases were separated from the cellulase by heat treatment at 65°C for 2.5 hr and purified by DEAE-Toyopearl chromatog-raphy, chromatography on an anion exchanger (PBE 94), and Bio-Gel A 0.5 m gel filtration. The molecular weights of the three types of xylanase, designated as xylanase A, B and C, were 51,000, 48,000, and 35,000, respectively. All three enzymes showed highest activity at pH 4.9 and 80°C in lOmin of incubation, and had the same hydrolysis pattern of larch wood xylan with the end- products of xylobiose and xylose. Thus their activities appear essentially the same but not their stabilities. Xylanase A and B were stable from pH 2.5 to 9.0 but xylanase C was unstable above pH 5.5. Xylanase C was unstable at 70°C where other two were stable.  相似文献   

20.
An alkaline active xylanase, XynBYG, was purified from an alkaliphilic Bacillus pumilus BYG, which was newly isolated from paper mill effluent. It had an optimum pH of 8.0–9.0, and showed good stability after incubated at pH 9.0 for 120 min. The optimum temperature for the activity was 50°C, and the enzyme retained below 55% of its original activity for 30 min at 55°C. The gene coding for XynBYG consists of 687 bp and encodes 229 amino acids. Similarity analysis indicated that XynBYG belong to family 11 glycosyl hydrolases. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed to replace five sites (Tyr/Ser) to Arg/Glu and the results demonstrated that the optimum temperature of the mutant Y7 (S39R-T146E) increased 5°C and the half-life of inactivation (T1/2) at 60 and 65°C was 1 h and 25 min, respectively. Thus, it provides a potential xylanase that can meet the harsh conditions in the industrial applications.  相似文献   

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