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1.
Acinetobacter O16, a psychrophilic species, produced extracellular lipase (measured by hydrolysis of olive oil, tributyrin, or beta-naphthyl laurate) when grown on a complex medium (peptone plus yeast extract). Most lipase was produced during the logarithmic phase of growth. Very little cell-bound lipase was formed. These cells also produced an esterase (measured by the hydrolysis of beta-naphthyl acetate). At first, all esterase was cell bound; significant amounts appeared in the external medium late in growth. Breaking the cells did not increase cell-bound lipase activity. After breaking of the cells, most of the cell-bound lipase and esterase activity was solubilized, even after very high speed centrifugation. No appreciable amounts of these enzymes were released by osmotic shock. Lipase formation was greatly affected by nutrient conditions. Lowering either the yeast extract of the peptone content of the normal complex medium lowered or abolished lipase formation. Esterase activity was lowered to a lesser extent. Cells growing in synthetic amino acid plus vitamin medium or in acid-hydrolyzed casein produced substantial amounts of esterase but no cell-free or cell-bound lipase. However, if sodium taurocholate was added to these media, lipase was produced. Greatest production occurred if a mixture of di- and poly-peptides was also present. Taurocholate also stimulated lipase production in the normal complex medium. Adding Tween 80 or ethanol to the normal complex medium inhibited lipase production. Sodium acetate, oleic acid, olive oil, or Tween 20 added to synthetic media did not affect lipase production. The psychrophile grew more quickly at 30 degrees C than at 15 or 20 degrees C but produced more lipase at the lower temperatures. Esterase production was about the same at 20 and 30 degrees C. A mesophilic Acinetobacter species produced the same amount of lipase and esterase at 20 and 30 degrees C. The best production of lipase by the psychrophile occurred in standing cultures.  相似文献   

2.
Lipolytic activity of lactobacilli strains and Brochothrix thermosphacta was cell-related; no significant activity was found in the supernatant fluids. Most lipase was produced during the logarithmic phase of growth and was greatly affected by growth conditions. The optimal temperatures for growth and lipase production were respectively 24 degrees C for B. thermosphacta and 30 degrees C for lactobacilli. For all strains, an initial pH of around 7.0 for the medium and low glucose concentration stimulated lipase production. Tributyrin inhibited both growth and lipase production at a concentration of 0.1% for B. thermosphacta or 1% for lactobacilli. Butyric acid (0.1%) and anaerobic culture inhibited lipase production by B. thermosphacta while these two factors had no effect on enzyme production by lactobacilli.  相似文献   

3.
Lipolytic activity of lactobacilli strains and Brochothrix thermosphacta was cellrelated; no significant activity was found in the supernatant fluids. Most lipase was produced during the logarithmic phase of growth and was greatly affected by growth conditions. The optimal temperatures for growth and lipase production were respectively 24°C for B. thermosphacta and 30°C for lactobacilli. For all strains, an initial pH of around 7-0 for the medium and low glucose concentration stimulated lipase production. Tributyrin inhibited both growth and lipase production at a concentration of 0-1% for B. thermosphacta or 1% for lactobacilli. Butyric acid (0-1%) and anaerobic culture inhibited lipase production by B. thermosphacta while these two factors had no effect on enzyme production by lactobacilli.  相似文献   

4.
Staphylococcus isolated from a common Indian sweet viz. basundi was tested for its ability to produce lipase. The colorless zone of hydrolysis around the colony grown on Baird Parker agar containing egg yolk produced extracellular lipase. Colony morphology, coagulase production, haemolysis, acid production in carbohydrate medium and enzyme activity studies showed that the organism was Staphylococcus warneri. Growth of S. warneri was obtained after 11 hr at 37 degrees C, pH 7.5, while the maximum production of lipase was obtained at 30 degrees C at pH 6.5 after 9 hr of incubation. Agitation did not increase lipase production. A sudden fall in the activity of lipase was noted after 11 hr. Addition of sucrose which is a growth stimulant for Staphylococcus, did not stimulate production of lipase by these organisms. Also, addition of oleic acid, Tween 80 or ethanol did not stimulate formation of lipase.  相似文献   

5.
The production of enterotoxins, lipase and total extracellular protein by four strains of Staphylococcus aureus grown in batch culture at a controlled pH of 6.5 in a completely defined medium was markedly reduced by glucose or glycerol constantly maintained at 0.I M. A concomitant increase in the production of deoxyribonuclease, up to 13-fold, showed however that not all extracellular proteins are under the same control mechanism. The presence of glucose and glycerol in the medium also resulted in a rapid increase in the specific growth rate. However, growth of S. aureus s6 in Mgilimited continuous culture showed that glucose repression of enterotoxin B when the growth rate was held constant was more than twice that in batch culture. Therefore glucose repression can occur independently of an increase in growth rate. The specific rate of production of enterotoxin B, lipase, deoxyribonuclease, beta-haemolysin and total extracellular protein by S. aureus s6 increased as the growth rate increased from 0.07 to 0.24 h-1. Non-replicating cells grown in the absence of glucose produced considerable amounts of enterotoxin, and production was not repressed by the presence of glucose in the resuspension medium. In contrast, no enterotoxin B or C was obtained from nonreplicating cells grown in the presence of glucose. Chloramphenicol completely inhibited enterotoxin production by non-replicating cells, indicating that synthesis of new protein was required.  相似文献   

6.
For thermostable lipase production by Humicola lanuginosa No. 3, a simple optimized medium consisting of (%, w/v): sorbitol, 1.0; corn steep liquor, 1.0; NaCl, 0.5; CaCl2–2H20, 0.01; Silicone Km-70 (antifoamer), 0.2; and whale oil or castor oil as a lipase inducer, 0.3, was used. The yield of the lipase was about 80 — 120U/ml after 25 hr aerobic cultivation at 45°C when the pH was maintained at 7 to 8. The acetone powder preparation of the enzyme was most active at pH 7.0 and 45°C. The enzyme retained 100% activity on incubation for 20 hr at 60°C. The enzyme was able to hydrolyze almost all forms of natural fats tested (14 kinds), coconut oil being the most rapidly hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

7.
Syncephalastrum racemosum grown as a static culture showed maximum lipase production at 30°C in 2d at pH 8.0. When the medium was supplemented with fructose, maximum production of lipase per unit of growth was achieved, followed by raffinose, sucrose, ribose, galactose, maltose, lactose, mannitol and glucose. Amongst the nitrogen sources tested, corn steep liquor at 8% (v/v) produced maximum enzyme; there was evidence of catabolite repression by glucose when groundnut protein, soybean meal, milk casein or wheat bran were the sources of nitrogen. Calcium, potassium and sodium citrates, each at 0.1% (w/v), increased the yield of lipase.  相似文献   

8.
Aspergillus oryzae produced a small amount of lipase (0.05–0.8 U/wet-g of solid medium) in solid cultures, in contrast to the larger amount (0.46 U/ml) in a shake-flask culture in a modified GYP medium containing 2% glucose, 1% yeast extract and 2% Polypepton. Optimum conditions of lipase production in the submerged culture of A. oryzae were determined in terms of pH, composition of medium, and temperature. In a shake-flask culture at 28°C, the maximum amount of lipase increased to 0.78 U/ml upon the addition of 3% soybean oil to the modified GYP medium. In a jar fermentor culture, 30 U/ml lipase activity was obtained after 72 h at 28°C under appropriate conditions. Lipase production was greatly influenced by the culture temperature, and the optimum temperature for lipase production was about 24°C with a narrow temperature range, which was 10 degrees lower than that for the growth. In the submerged cultures, two kinds of lipase at least exhibiting different substrate specificities were also suggested.  相似文献   

9.
A lipase-producing strain of Pseudomonas cepacia isolated from a soil sample was found to produce five compounds when oleic acid was added to the culture medium as lipase inducer. The five compounds were isolated by solvent extraction, silicagel column chromatography and preparative HPLC, and their structural elucidation was performed by mass spectrometry, and infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopies. The products were identified as dec-3-ene-1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 1 ), undec-3-ene-1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 2 ), dodec-3-ene-I,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 3 ), dodec-3,8-diene-1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 4 ) and dodec-3,6-diene-I,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 5 ). Accumulation of these compounds in the culture medium started after oleic acid consumption and followed a pattern similar to that found for cell growth and for lipase production. The five compounds were radioactively labeled when [U- 14 C]oleic acid was supplied to the culture medium, thus showing that they were produced by transformation of the acid. When isolated from cultures containing [1,2- 13 C]acetic acid and oleic acid as the sole sources of carbon, the compounds showed to contain the 13 C isotope only in the first five atoms of carbon of the molecule. Several long chain fatty acids also acted as precursors of these compounds, with maximal yields for chain lengths between 11 and 18 atoms of carbon. None of the five compounds acted as lipase inducer when added to the culture medium instead of oleic acid. The compounds showed moderate antibacterial and antifungal activities when tested in solid media bioassays.  相似文献   

10.
A lipase-producing strain of Pseudomonas cepacia isolated from a soil sample was found to produce five compounds when oleic acid was added to the culture medium as lipase inducer. The five compounds were isolated by solvent extraction, silicagel column chromatography and preparative HPLC, and their structural elucidation was performed by mass spectrometry, and infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopies. The products were identified as dec-3-ene-1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 1 ), undec-3-ene-1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 2 ), dodec-3-ene-I,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 3 ), dodec-3,8-diene-1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 4 ) and dodec-3,6-diene-I,3,4-tricarboxylic acid 3,4-anhydride (product 5 ). Accumulation of these compounds in the culture medium started after oleic acid consumption and followed a pattern similar to that found for cell growth and for lipase production. The five compounds were radioactively labeled when [U- 14 C]oleic acid was supplied to the culture medium, thus showing that they were produced by transformation of the acid. When isolated from cultures containing [1,2- 13 C]acetic acid and oleic acid as the sole sources of carbon, the compounds showed to contain the 13 C isotope only in the first five atoms of carbon of the molecule. Several long chain fatty acids also acted as precursors of these compounds, with maximal yields for chain lengths between 11 and 18 atoms of carbon. None of the five compounds acted as lipase inducer when added to the culture medium instead of oleic acid. The compounds showed moderate antibacterial and antifungal activities when tested in solid media bioassays.  相似文献   

11.
Some properties of an extracellular lipase produced byLactobacillus delbrueckii subsp.bulgaricus were studied. Maximum enzyme activity was found against olive and butter oil as enzyme substrates. Addition of 9% acacia gum, 0.1% Na-deoxycholate and 0.01 M CaCl2 to the enzyme reaction mixture increased-lipase activity from 5.3 to 14.5 (FFA/mg protein/minute) at pH 6.0 and at 40° C. Maximum lipase production was reached in the presence of glucose as a sole source of carbon, wheat bran as nitrogen source, olive oil as a sole lipid source and butyric acid as fatty acid supporting the growth medium. An initial pH value of the culture medium of 6.0 and a temperature of 35° C gave the highest lipolytic activity.  相似文献   

12.
A purified alkaline thermo-tolerant bacterial lipase from Bacillus cereus MTCC 8372 was immobilized on a Poly (MAc-co-DMA-cl-MBAm) hydrogel. The hydrogel showed approximately 94% binding capacity for lipase. The immobilized lipase (2.36 IU) was used to achieve esterification ofmyristic acid and isopropanol in n-heptane at 65 degrees C under continuous shaking. The myristic acid and isopropanol when used at a concentration of 100 mM each in n-heptane resulted in formation of isopropyl myristate (66.0 +/- 0.3 mM) in 15 h. The reaction temperature below or higher than 65 degrees C markedly reduced the formation of isopropyl myristate. Addition of a molecular sieve (3 A x 1.5 mm) to the reaction mixture drastically reduced the ester formation. The hydrogel bound lipase when repetitively used to perform esterification under optimized conditions resulted in 38.0 +/- 0.2 mM isopropyl myristate after the 3rd cycle of esterification.  相似文献   

13.
Cells of Candida bogoriensis produce as a major extracellular lipid 13-[(2'-O-beta-D-glucopyranosyl-beta-D-glucopyranosyl)oxy]docosanoic acid 6',6'-diacetate (Ac2Glc2HDA), the diacetylated sophoroside of 13-hydroxydocosanoic acid (HDA), along with mono- and unacetylated derivatives. The HDA glycolipid production is greater than 2 g/liter when cells are grown on a "standard" medium of 3% glucose and 0.15% yeast extract. Either lowering the glucose concentration (0.5 to 2.0% glucose, at 0.2% yeast extract) or raising the yeast extract concentration (2 to 4% yeast extract at 3% glucose) greatly decreased the yield of this glycolipid, as well as its rate of synthesis measured by [14C]acetate incorporation. Total HDA production was also depressed on the low glucose medium, as was the activity of UDP-glucose:HDA glucosyltransferase, the first enzyme involved in the synthesis of Ac2Glc2HDA from HDA. Levels of acetyl-CoA:Glc2HDA acetyltransferase were not decreased by growth on a low glucose medium, however, even under conditions in which glycolipid production was less than 4% of that found in the standard medium. Low levels of the HDA glycolipids were monitored by high pressure liquid chromatography of their p-bromophenacyl esters, formed by the action of alpha,beta-dibromoacetophenone on the sodium salt of the lipid in the presence of a crown reagent catalyst. This regulation of extracellular Ac2Glc2HDA production by the nutrient composition of the growth medium may represent an important property in the adaptation of C. bogoriensis to its natural environment, the phyllosphere.  相似文献   

14.
Eighteen bacterial strains were isolated from soil samples and screened for alkaline, thermophilic lipase production. Pseudomonas fluorescens NS2W was selected and its production of lipase was optimized in shake flasks using a statistical experimental design. Cell growth and lipase production were studied in shake flasks and in a 1-l fermenter in the optimized medium. Maximum lipase yields were 69.7 and 68.7 U ml−1, respectively. The optimized medium resulted in about a five-fold increase in the enzyme production, compared to that obtained in the basal medium. The lipase had an optimal activity at pH 9.0 and was stable over a wide pH range of 3–11 with more than 70% activity retention. The lipase had an optimal activity at 55°C and was stable up to 60°C with more than 70% activity retention for at least 2 h. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2002) 28, 344–348 DOI: 10.1038/sj/jim/7000254 Received 06 September 2001/ Accepted in revised form 15 March 2002  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Filamentous fungi isolated from soil samples were screened for extracellular lipase production. The best producer was Hypocrea pseudokoningii identified by taxonomical criteria, and by rDNA sequencing of the variable internal transcribed spacers (ITS I and II) and the intervening 5.8S gene. The fungus was grown in a complex medium supplemented with 1% Tween 80 and 0.2% yeast extract, for 4 days. The optimum pH for extracellular and intracellular lipases was 7.0 and 8.0, respectively. Both enzymes exhibited maximum activity at 40°C. Extracellular and intracellular lipase activities were highly stable in the pH range 3.0–8.0 at room temperature. The intracellular lipase was thermostable up to 60°C, for 15 min and the extracellular, for 107 min, at the same temperature. The intracellular lipase was stimulated by silver ions. Extracellular lipase was stable in organic solvents, such as DMSO, alcohols, acetone, and acetonitrile, for 24 hours. Lipase activity increased around 80% when detergents were added to the enzymatic assay, such as Tween 80, Triton X-100, and SDS.  相似文献   

16.
An extracellular lipase-producing fungus was isolated from the garden soil of the Post Graduate Department of Botany, Utkal University, Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India and identified as Aspergillus terreus. The A. terreus strain isolated was found to be capable of producing lipase in both solid state culture and liquid static surface culture. Experiments aimed at evaluating and improving the production of lipase and at studying the culture conditions revealed that of the many different materials tested as substrates, mustard oil cake (MoC) was the best substrate for extracellular lipase production. A correlation was found between the lipase production profile and biomass development. In a study aimed at continuing this line of research, we have investigated the influence of various culture conditions, such as environmental (i.e. temperature and pH), nutritional (i.e. carbon, nitrogen, metal ions, vitamins, combined agro-wastes and growth regulators) and other factors (inoculum size and initial moisture content) on the production of lipase by A. terreus in solid state and liquid static surface cultures. We observed that optimum lipase biosynthesis occurred under the following conditions: initial pH of 6.0, 30 °C, a 96-h incubation, lactose and ammonium persulphate as the carbon and nitrogen source respectively and 80 % moisture content. Changes in the vitamins (vitamin C, riboflavin, folic acid and vitamin E) and growth regulators (gibberellic acid, kinetin, 6-benzylaminopurine and 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) did not support enhanced lipase production. MoC and neem oil cake (NoC) added to the media at a ratio of 9:1 respectively, supported maximum lipase production. Based on these results, we concluded that controlling the various culture conditions, supplementing MoC as a substrate and nutrient source modification of the medium can spectacularly enhance lipase biosynthesis by A. terreus.  相似文献   

17.
Rhodotorula mucilaginosa P11I89, isolated from oil-contaminated soil, was effectively used as the methanol-tolerant, whole-cell lipase for the synthesis of fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) via transesterification reaction in the presence of palm oil and methanol substrates at a 1:6 mole ratio. A combination of Taguchi experimental design and response surface methodology (RSM) were applied to systemically enhance transesterification activity of the whole-cell lipase or cell-bound lipase (CBL) from R. mucilaginosa P11I89 in a solvent-free system. The significant impacts of four factors including carbon sources, nitrogen sources, surfactants and pH on hydrolysis activity of extracellular and cell-bound lipases, and on the transesterification activity of CBL were evaluated using Taguchi design. Gum Arabic was the most significant component for high transesterification activity, whereas soybean oil was the most influential factor for the hydrolysis activity. Maximal CBL production of 272.72 U/L was obtained in the cultivation medium containing 2.1 % palm oil, 0.2 % NH4NO3 , and 0.45 % Gum Arabic, with initial pH 5.0 under shaking speed of 200 rpm at a temperature of 30?±?2 °C after 60 h incubation using Central Composite Design (CCD). Yeast cells grown under such conditions increased FAME yield from 84.0 to 92.98 % when the transesterification reaction was carried out, in comparison to those cultivated in the initial medium.  相似文献   

18.
An extracellular lipase, LipA, extracted from Acinetobacter sp. RAG-1 grown on hexadecane was purified and properties of the enzyme investigated. The enzyme is released into the growth medium during the transition to stationary phase. The lipase was harvested from cells grown to stationary phase, and purified with 22% yield and > 10-fold purification. The protein demonstrates little affinity for anion exchange resins, with contaminating proteins removed by passing crude supernatants over a Mono Q column. The lipase was bound to a butyl Sepharose column and eluted in a Triton X-100 gradient. The molecular mass (33 kDa) was determined employing SDS/PAGE. LipA was found to be stable at pH 5.8-9.0, with optimal activity at 9.0. The lipase remained active at temperatures up to 70 degrees C, with maximal activity observed at 55 degrees C. LipA is active against a wide range of fatty acid esters of p-nitrophenyl, but preferentially attacks medium length acyl chains (C6, C8). The enzyme demonstrates hydrolytic activity in emulsions of both medium and long chain triglycerides, as demonstrated by zymogram analysis. RAG-1 lipase is stabilized by Ca2+, with no loss in activity observed in preparations containing the cation, compared to a 70% loss over 30 h without Ca2+. The lipase is strongly inhibited by EDTA, Hg2+, and Cu2+, but shows no loss in activity after incubation with other metals or inhibitors examined in this study. The protein retains more than 75% of its initial activity after exposure to organic solvents, but is rapidly deactivated by pyridine. RAG-1 lipase offers potential for use as a biocatalyst.  相似文献   

19.
Growth and production of lipase by a new Geotrichum-like strain, R59, were studied. Production of extracellular lipase was substantially enhanced when the initial pH of the culture medium, types of carbon and nitrogen sources, substances probably stimulating the lipase biosynthesis, the temperature, and time of growth were optimized. Sucrose and triolein were the most effective carbon sources for lipase production. Maximum lipase activity (146 U/ml–1) was obtained with urea as the nitrogen source. Growth at 30°C, an initial pH of 6.0 and incubation time of 48 h were found as optimum conditions for cell growth and production of lipase by Geotrichum-like strain R59. The enzyme was thermostable and exhibited very high activity after 1 h incubation at 60°C.  相似文献   

20.
Effect of different carbon sources on lipase production by Candida rugosa   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Different carbon sources affecting growth and lipase production in Candida rugosa were studied by using batch cultures on defined medium. Carbohydrates and acids non-related to fats did not induce lipase production. The highest yields of enzyme were obtained with lipids or fatty acids as carbon sources. Tween 80 stimulated lipase biosynthesis and secretion outside the cell. Combinations of two types of substrates, carbohydrates and fatty acids, did not improve lipase production, and in some cases, their consumption was produced in a sequential pattern. Glucose presented a repressing effect on lipase production. Moreover, glucose was found to be effective in stimulating lipase secretion by cells with a high level of cell-bound lipase activity because of their previous growth in oleic acid.  相似文献   

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