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1.
Penicillium candidum grew and produced lipase in a culture medium supplemented with 0.2% olive oil. Significant enzyme production required the presence of olive, oil and was prevented by cycloheximide. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of filtrates from olive oil fermentations gave a single band of lipase activity (MW 80 KDa). Among the olive oil components only oleate allowed significant lipase production. Other carboxylic and saturated fatty acids containing similar or lower numbers of carbon atoms, did not cause derepression of lipase formation.  相似文献   

2.
Lipase (Glycerol ester hydrolase E.G. 3.1.1.3) from a Brazilian strain of Penicillium citrinum free of the mycotoxin citrinin has been investigated. Citrinin production was inhibited by using culture medium containing olive oil, soybean oil and corn oil as carbon sources. Potassium concentration and pH play an important role in citrinin production. Potassium concentration lower than 30 mM and pH below 4.5 inhibited the mycotoxin production. P. citrinum produced lipase free of extraneous proteins and citrinin when cultured using, as nitrogen source, ammonium sulphate (lipase activity of 7.88 U/mg) and yeast extract (lipase activity of 4.95 U/mg) with olive oil as carbon source. This data is relevant to the larger scale production of lipases for food technology applications, from Penicillium citrinum.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The entomopathogenic fungus,Beauveria bassiana, produces an extracellular lipase when grown on a yeast extract-peptone-dextrose broth (YPD) medium. The time course of lipase production in the presence of olive oil was studied and which was shown to induce lipase. The addition of fatty acids, such as, myristic, palmitic, stearic, oleic, linoleic and arachidic acids, inhibited both growth and lipase production. Lipase production was also assessed on YPD and glucose minimal salts (GMS) medium. The addition of olive oil increased the lipase induction much more on, YPD than on the GMS. The effect of the divalent metal ions; iron, copper and magnesium, on lipase activity was studied. Whereas the iron and copper inhibited lipase activity, magnesium slightly increased lipase activity. Compounds containing a hydrolyzable ester group, such as Tweens, were found to inhibit lipase activity.  相似文献   

4.
Summary High concentration production of an extracellular enzyme, lipase, was achieved by a fed-batch culture of Pseudomonas fluorescens. During the cultivation, temperature, pH and dissolved oxygen concentration wwre maintained at 23°C, 6.5 and 2–5 ppm, respectively. Olive oil was used as a carbon source for microbial growth. To produce lipase effectively the specific feed rate of olive oil had to be maintained in a range of 0.04–0.06 (g oil) · (g dry cell)-1 · h-1. The CO2 evolution rate was monitored to estimate the requirement of olive oil. The ratio of feed rate of olive oil to the CO2 evolution rate was varied in the range of 20–60 g oil/mol CO2. The higher value of the ratio accelerated microbial growth, but did not favour lipase production. Once the high cell concentration of 60 g/l had been achieved, the ratio was changed from 50 to 30 g oil/mol CO2 to accelerate the lipase production. By this CO2-dependent method a very high activity of lipase, 1980 units/ml, was obtained. Both the productivity and yield of lipase were prominently increased compared with a conventional batch culture.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, we invetigated the hydrolysis of olive oil catalyzed by a surfactant-coatedCandida rugosa lipase in a hydrophilic polyacrylonitrile hollow fiber membrane reactor and then compared the results to those using the native lipase. The organic phase was passed through the hollow inner fibers of the reactor and consisted of either the coated lipase and olive oil dissolved in isooctane or the coated lipase dissolved in pure olive oil. The aqueous phase was pumped through the outer space. After 12 h and with conditions of 30°C, 0.12 mg enzyme/mL and 0.62 M olive oil, the substrate conversion of the coated lipase reached 60%. This was twice the conversion for the same amount of native lipase that was pre-immobilized on the membrane surface. When using pure olive oil, after 12 h the substrate conversion of the coated lipase was 50%. which was 1.4 times higher than that of the native lipase.  相似文献   

6.
A filamentous, Gram‐positive, spore forming aerobic bacterium was isolated from olive oil contaminated soil (Al Koura, Lebanon) on rhodamine agar plates at 60 °C. The isolate, HRK‐1 produced large quantities of an extracellular thermostable lipase which degrades olive oil. It was primarily classified as a Thermoactinomyces sp. due to the filamentous structure of its cells that bear one spore each on an un‐branched sporophore, the resistance of its spores to boiling, utilisation of sucrose as a carbon source and production of dark pigments. The isolate grew optimally at a temperature of 60 °C, a pH of 7.3 and an orbital shaking of 250 rpm. It showed an efficient olive oil degrading ability. No traces of triolein were detected after a 36‐h cultivation. A concentration of 10 % [v/v] olive oil did not inhibit its growth. Lipase production was constitutive, and did not depend on the presence of olive oil. The optimum concentration of olive oil for lipase activity was 1 % [v/v], and the activity was not enhanced at higher concentrations, but on the contrary, a decrease in enzyme activity was recorded. The lipase of HRK‐1 was preliminarily characterised in the crude cell‐free supernatant with a specific activity of 0.14 U/mg. It has an optimum activity at 60 °C and a pH of 8.0. This lipolytic enzyme showed resistance to boiling and to a wide range of metallic ions and inhibitors. The formation of this heat‐stable lipase started in the early exponential growth phase, while a maximum extracellular enzyme activity was detected at the end of the decline phase, when most of the cells appeared as spherical spores. The exceptionally high activity of lipase (2.37 U/ml) produced by HRK‐1 measured in the cell free supernatant clearly indicated the commercial importance of this isolate, especially after it showed great stability at elevated temperatures.  相似文献   

7.
The influence on lipase induction in Mucor hiemalis of different types of triglycerides containing mainly oleic acid (olive oil), erucic acid (mustard oil), or saturated fatty acids of 8 to 16 carbons (coconut oil) was studied. The fungus was grown in shake flasks in a fermentation medium containing peptone, minerals, and glucose or one of the oils as the carbon source. Maximum lipase was produced when the initial pH of the fermentation medium was kept at 4.0. Addition of Ca2+ to the medium did not increase lipase production. The optimum pH for activity of both the mycelial and extracellular lipases was found to be 7.0. The fungus produced a significant amount of lipase in the presence of glucose, but the lipase activity increased markedly when olive oil was added to the medium at the beginning of the fermentation. Addition of olive oil at a later stage did not induce as much enzyme. Studies with washed mycelia showed that a greater amount of lipase was released when olive oil was present than when glucose was present. Among the various types of triglycerides used as the carbon source, olive oil was found to be most effective in inducing the lipase. Olive oil and mustard oil fatty acids inhibited the lipase more than those of coconut oil. The lipase induced by a particular type of triglyceride did not seem to be specific for the same triglyceride, nor was it inhibited specifically by it. Irrespective of the triglyceride used in the fermentation medium, the lipase produced was most active against coconut oil triglyceride, and this specificity, as shown by lipase activities in an n-heptane system, was not found to be due to a better emulsification of this oil. The lipase of M. hiemalis can be considered to be both constitutive and inducible.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Various strategies for the production of lipase by Candida rugosa Diddens and Lodder (ATCC 14830) in stirred tank reactors were investigated. The strain was first screened for lipase production with agar plate assay based on the fluorescent dye Rhodamine B, followed by adaptation to the production medium used. The highest lipase activity of 7.6 U/ml was obtained on a medium containing 40 g olive oil/l and 1 g glucose/l, with supplying pure oxygen. Neural networks were used in the estimation of biomass and lipase activity.  相似文献   

9.
The lipase produced by a strain of Penicillium crustosum Thom was fractionated into three lipase components, I~III by DEAE cellulose column chromatography, and two of them, I and II were purified and obtained in crystalline form respectively, which proved homogeneous by electrophoresis and ultracentrifugal analysis. Lipase I was an ordinary lipase with molecular weight about 29,000 hydrolyzing olive oil and tributyrin favourably in almost the same degree, while II, rather, a so-called tributyrinase with M. W. about 32,000 hydrolyzing tributyrin more efficiently than olive oil. The site of the activity on olive oil in these lipase was generally sensitive to sodium desoxycholate, ethylenediamine-tetraacetate (EDTA), and p-chloromercuribenzoate (PCMB), and lipase I was converted to a lipase II by a treatment with these reagents. Also, partial degradation of I by proteinase (‘pronase’) yielded the enzyme fragment of type II. On the other hand, treatment of the enzymes with hydrogen peroxide or sodium borohydride caused the conversion of type II into I. From the observation of UV difference spectrum during incubation with sodium desoxycholate it was indicated that the situation of tryptophane residue in enzyme molecule may have a significance in the activity of lipase I on olive oil.  相似文献   

10.
The production of lipases by microorganisms is strongly influenced by the culture conditions. The optimum culture conditions for enzyme production are strain- and species-dependent. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of the carbon source used in the culture medium on the profile of lipases produced by Yarrowia lipolytica KKP 379. We observed a different pattern of extracellular and cell-bound lipase production, which was the highest in the early exponential phase. The extracellular lipase activity increased in the late exponential phase due to the lower accumulation of lipase molecules in cell walls. The best carbon source for extracellular lipase production by Y. lipolytica KKP 379 was olive oil. Glucose, dodecane and olive oil had a positive effect on biomass yield. Dodecane and/or glycerol utilization in microbiological lipase production was possible, but this process could not proceed without the addition of some activators such as olive oil in the cultivation medium.  相似文献   

11.
The production of biofuel using thermostable bacterial lipase from hot spring bacteria out of low-cost agricultural residue olive oil cake is reported in the present paper. Using a lipase enzyme from Bacillus licheniformis, a 66.5% yield of methyl esters was obtained. Optimum parameters were determined, with maximum production of lipase at a pH of 8.2, temperature 50.8°C, moisture content of 55.7%, and biosurfactant content of 1.693?mg. The contour plots and 3D surface responses depict the significant interaction of pH and moisture content with biosurfactant during lipase production. Chromatographic analysis of the lipase transesterification product was methyl esters, from kitchen waste oil under optimized conditions, generated methyl palmitate, methyl stearate, methyl oleate, and methyl linoleate.  相似文献   

12.
Investigation of lipase production by a new isolate of Aspergillus sp.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fungi isolated from soil were screened for exogenous lipolytic activity. The highest lipase activity was found in a new soil isolate of Aspergillus sp. Some optimal cultural parameters influencing the growth and production of extracellular lipase from this Aspergillus sp. were investigated. The lipase yield was maximum on day 4 of incubation of the culture at pH 5.5 and 30 °C. When the medium was prepared using olive oil as carbon source and peptone as a nitrogen source, better lipase yields were obtained. Aeration enhanced growth and lipase production.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Among various additives that affected production of a new thermostable extracellular lipase from Pseudomonas sp. NT-163 , stearyl alcohol was the most effective. Addition of stearyl alcohol (0.5%) brought about ca. 500 fold enhancement of the lipase activity (200 U/ml by p-nitorophenyllaurate method) compared to the case with no additive ( 0.4 U/ml), while olive oil attained only 12–15 U/ml. Palmityl and oleyl alcohols also were highly effective as lipase inducers (150–160 U/ml could be attained). Furthermore, stearyl alcohol induced lipase formation in several other Bacteriol strains 10-times more than olive oil.  相似文献   

14.
Summary An automatic feeding system to supply olive oil in semi-batch culture was established by monitoring cell concentration with a laser turbidimeter combined with a microcomputer and a pulse motor. In this automatic feeding system, specific olive oil supply rate (g olive oil) · (g dry cell)-1 · h-1, q 0, was changed in an appropriate range. Attempts were made to produce lipase by a turbidity-dependent automatic fed-batch culture of Pseudomonas fluorescens. It was found from the semi-batch cultures with turbidity-dependent feeding of olive oil and with varied initial Fe ion concentrations that excess Fe ion was inhibitory to formation of the lipase. Turbidity-dependent automatic simultaneous feeding of olive oil and Fe ion was performed to obtain semi-deficiencies of both the oily substrate in the culture liquid and Fe content of the cells. Using this semi-batch culture, high lipase activity, 5600 units/ml, was attained at an optimal value of q 0.  相似文献   

15.
The non-conventional yeast Yarrowia lipolytica produces an extracellular lipase encoded by the LIP2 gene. Mutant strains with enhanced productivity were previously obtained either by chemical mutagenesis or genetic engineering. In this work, we used one of these mutants, named LgX64.81 to select new overproducing strains following by amplification of the LIP2 gene. We also developed a process for lipase production in bioreactors and compared lipase production levels in batch and fed-batch cultures. Batch culture led to a lipase production of 26450 U ml(-1) in a media containing olive oil and tryptone as carbon and nitrogen sources. Feeding of a combination of tryptone and olive oil at the end of the exponential growth phase yielded to lipase activity of 158246 U ml(-1) after 80 h of cultivation. In addition this production system developed for the extracellular lipase could also be applied for other heterologous protein production since we have demonstrated that LgX64.81 is an interesting alternative host strain.  相似文献   

16.
Forty each of aspergilli and penicillia were screened for extracellular lipase production on agar plates and in liquid medium containing olive oil as substrate. Twenty-nine aspergilli and twenty-six penicillia produced lipase. Out of these, 19 aspergilli and 22 penicillia showed activity both on Nile blue sulfate and glycerol tributyrate agar plates while only 10 aspergilli and 4 penicillia showed a positive response to glycerol tributyrate agar alone. The screening revealed 11Aspergillus spp. and 15Penicillium spp. as new lipase producers. Pig fat as an economic substrate for lipase production was also investigated.  相似文献   

17.
For the production of extracellular lipase by Alcaligenes species No. 679, NaNO3, polyoxyethylene alkyl ether, Fe++, sodium citrate and fructose were found to be effective. The enzyme was prepared by acetone precipitation from the filtrate of the culture broth of this strain. The enzyme was most active at pH 9.0 and 50°C, while 35% of its activity was lost on heat treatment at 60°C for 10 min. Sodium salts of bile acids stimulated the enzyme activity. This lipase could hydrolyse natural fats and oils as well as olive oil. During the hydrolysis of olive oil, monoglyceride was found to accumulate up to 70 mol percent. This lipase possesses special properties similar to those of pancreatic lipase as shown in the comparative experiments.  相似文献   

18.
From the soil samples of various locations, 245 strains of microorganisms were isolated by the enrichment culture method using olive oil as a carbon source. Of these microorganisms one deuteromycotinous yeast was the best producer of extracellular lipase, and the strain WU-C12 was identified as Trichosporon fermentans from the morphological and taxonomical properties. When cultivated at 30°C for 4 d in the medium containing 8% (w/v) corn steep and 3% (v/v) olive oil as sources of nitrogen and carbon, T. fermentans WU-C12 produced 126 U/ml of extracellular lipase. When 3% (v/v) tung oil was used instead of 3% (v/v) olive oil, 146 U/ml of the lipase was produced. Although lipase production decreased to 40 U/ml by the addition of 2% (w/v) glucose to the corn steep-olive oil medium, the strain WU-C12 produced 34 U/ml of lipase in the medium containing 2% (w/v) glucose instead of 3% (v/v) olive oil. On the other hand, T. fermentans WU-C12 could grow and produce lipase in the medium containing n-paraffin as a carbon source.  相似文献   

19.
Summary An extracellular alkaline lipase was evaluated from Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes F-111, which was isolated from soil using a rhodamine B agar plate with Na2CO3. For enzyme production, olive oil, soymeal, triton X-100 and sodium ion were found to be essential. The addition of triton X-100 increased the alkaline lipase by 50- fold. The effect of additives as well as the development of suitable culture conditions for lipase production is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Lipase secretion, extracellular lipolysis, and fatty acid uptake were quantified in the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica grown in the presence of olive oil and/or glucose. Specific lipase assays, Western blot analysis, and ELISA indicated that most of the lipase activity measured in Y. lipolytica cultures resulted from the YLLIP2 lipase. Lipase production was triggered by olive oil and, during the first hours of culture, most of the lipase activity and YLLIP2 immunodetection remained associated with the yeast cells. YLLIP2 was then released in the culture medium before it was totally degraded by proteases. Olive oil triglycerides were largely degraded when the lipase was still attached to the cell wall. The fate of lipolysis products in the culture medium and inside the yeast cell, as well as lipid storage, was investigated simultaneously by quantitative TLC–FID and GC analysis. The intracellular levels of free fatty acids (FFA) and triglycerides increased transiently and were dependent on the carbon sources. A maximum fat storage of 37.8% w/w of yeast dry mass was observed with olive oil alone. A transient accumulation of saturated FFA was observed whereas intracellular triglycerides became enriched in unsaturated fatty acids. So far, yeasts have been mainly used for studying the intracellular synthesis, storage, and mobilization of neutral lipids. The present study shows that yeasts are also interesting models for studying extracellular lipolysis and fat uptake by the cell. The quantitative data obtained here allow for the first time to establish interesting analogies with gastrointestinal and vascular lipolysis in humans.  相似文献   

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