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1.
During decaffeination of Coffee Processing Plant Solid Wastes (CPSW) by actinomycetes, Thermomonospora, Strain 29 exhibited high titers of cellulase and xylanase. This organism, originally isolated on soybean seed coat was grown in solid state fermentation on CPSW supplemented with mineral salts. Enzymes recovered were arabinosidase, xylanase, and beta-D-xylosidase. Higher activity of the former two enzymes was in the extracellular broth, whereas the beta-D-xylosidase activity was highest in the cell fraction. The enzymes were characterized after precipitation with (NH(4))(2)SO(4), dialysis, and gel filtration. Production of all three enzymes was inhibited by monomeric sugars and sugar alcohols but not by arabinoxylan, xylans, or xylan containing water insoluble carbohydrates. The optimum pH for the activity was 6.5, 7.0, and 7.5 for beta-xylosidase, xylanase and arabinosidase (alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase, alpha-arabinosidase, alpha-L-arabinosidase) respectively. These enzymes were stable in the pH range of 6.5 to 8.0. All three enzymes were thermostable up to 80 degrees C. At 55 degrees C, arabinosidase had the longest half life of 120 h. However, at 40 degrees C, xylanase had the longest half life (504 h). At either temperature, beta-D-xylosidase had the shortest half life. The molecular weights (kDa), and Kms (mM) were estimated to be 95, 0.27; 45, 12.4; and 106, 0.67 for arbinosidase, xylanase, and beta-xylosidase respectively. Step wise addition of the three enzymes showed higher saccharification of lignocellulosics.  相似文献   

2.
AIMS: To determine and quantify the products from the degradation of xylan by a range of purified xylan-degrading enzymes, endoxylanase, beta-xylosidase and alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase produced extracellularly by Thermomonospora fusca BD25. METHODS AND RESULTS: The amounts of reducing sugars released from oat-spelt xylan by the actions of endoxylanase, beta-xylosidase and alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase were equal to 28.1, 4.6 and 7% hydrolysis (as xylose equivalents) of the substrate used, respectively. However, addition of beta-xylosidase and alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase preparation to endoxylanase significantly enhanced (70 and 20% respectively) the action of endoxylanase on the substrate. The combination of purified endoxylanase, beta-xylosidase and alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase preparations produced a greater sugar yield (58.6% hydrolysis) and enhanced the total reducing sugar yield by around 50%. The main xylooligosaccharide products released using the action of endoxylanase alone on oat-spelt xylan were identified as xylobiose and xylopentose. alpha-l-Arabinofuranosidase was able to release arabinose and xylobiose from oat-spelt xylan. In the presence of all three purified enzymes the hydrolysis products of oat-spelt xylan were mainly xylose, arabinose and substituted xylotetrose with lesser amount of substituted xylotriose. CONCLUSIONS: The addition of the beta-xylosidase and alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase enzymes to purified xylanases more than doubled the degradation of xylan from 28 to 58% of the total substrate with xylose and arabinose being the major sugars produced. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The results highlight the role of xylan de-branching enzymes in the degradation of xylan and suggest that the use of enzyme cocktails may significantly improve the hydrolysis of xylan in industrial processes.  相似文献   

3.
Relationships between activities of xylanases and xylan structures   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Structures of five water-soluble xylans have been determined. Four purified xylanase enzymes have been studied for the hydrolysis of the xylans. Different xylanases have different activities against various xylan structures. The key factors that influence the rate of xylan hydrolysis are chain length and degree of substitution. Two family 11 xylanases, Orpinomyces pc2 xylanase and Trichoderma longibrachiatum xylanase, can rapidly hydrolyze xylans that have a chain length greater than 8 xylose residues, and their hydrolytic rates are not sensitive to substituents on the xylan backbone. A family 11 xylanase from Aureobasidium pullulans is most effective on xylans that have a long chain (greater than 19 xylose residues), and also is effective against substituent groups. Although Thermatoga maritima xylanase is also more active on a long xylan chain (greater than 19 xylose residues), its hydrolytic rate is greatly reduced by substituents on xylan backbones.  相似文献   

4.
Renewable natural resources such as xylans are abundant in many agricultural wastes. Penicillium sp. AHT-1 is a strong producer of xylanolytic enzymes. The sequential activities of its xylanase, alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase, and beta-xylosidase on model hemicellulose oat-spelt xylan was investigated. Optimum production of the enzymes was found in culture containing oat-spelt xylan at 30 degrees C and initial pH 7.0 after 6 days. The enzymes were partially purified by ammonium sulphate fractionation and anion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Toyopearl 650 S. The apparent molecular mass was 21 kDa, and the protein displayed an "endo" mode of action. The xylanase exhibited glycotansferase activity. It synthesized higher oligosaccharides from the initial substrates, and xylotriose was the shortest unit of substrate transglycosylated. Xylanolytic enzymes (enzyme mixture) produced by this Penicillium sp. interacted cooperatively and sequentially in the hydrolysis of oat-spelt xylan in the following order: alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase --> xylanase --> beta-xylosidase. All three enzymes exhibited optimal activity under the same conditions (temperature, pH, cultivation), indicating that they alone are sufficient to completely depolymerize the test xylan. Results indicate that the xylanolytic enzyme mixture of Penicillium sp. AHT-1 could be useful for bioconversion of xylan-rich plant wastes to value-added products.  相似文献   

5.
The growth of Trichoderma reesei QM9414 in shake flasks at 28 degrees C on hemicellulose substrates and bagasse resulted in rather low yields of hemicellulolytic enzymes (1.0-1.5 units/mL xylanase and 0.05-0.08 units/mL beta-xylosidase). The influence of pH on the synthesis of beta-xylosidase was greater than on the synthesis of xylanase. Both xylanase and beta-xylosidase showed optimal activity at pH 4-5 and 55-60 degrees C. Xylanase was stable at pH 2-10 but was heat labile and totally inactivated after 1 h at 65 degrees C. Enzyme stability towards heat could be increased in the presence of bovine serum albumin. The beta-xylosidase was more tolerant to heat, but stable over a pH range 2.5-6.0. The D-xylose inhibited both enzymes in a competitive manner. Hemicellulose (heteroxylan) was degraded to the extent of 30-40%within 24 h. The degree of hydrolysis decreased as the substrate concentration increased and increased with increased amounts of enzyme. Multiple enzyme doses resulted in increased saccharification in reduced times. The degree of hydrolysis was influenced by the amount of beta-xylosidase present in the hemicellulolytic enzyme preparation. The -;xylosidase was demonstrated to play an important role in the overall conversion of heteroxylan into xylose that is analogous to the role of beta-glucosidase in the saccharification of cellulose by cellulases.  相似文献   

6.
Neurospora crassa 870 produced 14 and 0.025 U of extracellular xylanase (1,4-beta-d-xylan xylanohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.8) and beta-xylosidase (1,4-beta-xylan xylohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.37) per ml, respectively, in 4 days when commercial xylan was used as a carbon source. The effects of pH and carbon sources on xylanase production by N. crassa are discussed. Two xylanases (I and II) were purified and had pI values of 4.8 and 4.5 and molecular weights of 33,000 and 30,000. The maximum degree of hydrolysis of xylan by the extracellular culture broth was 66% in 4 h. The end products of xylan hydrolysis by xylanase I and II showed the presence of xylose, xylobiose, xylotriose, xylotetraose, xylopentose, and arabinose, indicating that they are endoxylanases capable of hydrolyzing 1,3-alpha-l-arabinofuranosyl branch points. Both xylanases showed activity toward carboxymethyl cellulose but no activity toward para-nitrophenyl-beta-d-xyloside or laminarin. Xylanase I showed appreciable activity toward para-nitrophenyl-beta-d-glucoside, whereas xylanase II was inactive.  相似文献   

7.
A growth medium was developed for maximal production in batch culture of extracellular xylanase and beta-xylosidase by Aspergillus awamori CMI 142717 and a mutant (AANTG 43) derived from the wild-type strain. The optimum pH for the production of xylanase and beta-xylosidase was 4.0. The best temperature of xylanase production was 30 degrees C; 35 degrees C was optimal for beta-xylosidase. Protease production was never completely suppressed under any of the conditions tested. However, protease titre was 3.5-fold less than the control in medium in which proteose peptone and yeast extract were omitted: the level of xylanase was not affected (8.6 U mL(-1)) but beta-xylosidase titre was increased 4.7-fold to 1.5 U mL(-1). When corn steep liquor was used as the sole nitrogen source, xylanse and beta-xylosidase titres were further increased by 1.5- and 1.9-fold, respectively. Of the carbon sources investigated, ball-milled oat straw or oat spelt xylan produced the highest titres of xylanse and beta-xylosidase. None of the soluble carbon sources investigated produced the high titres of xylanase or beta-xylosidase induced by either oat straw for xylanse and beta-xylosidase was 2% and the optimum spore inoculum was between 10(6) and 10(7) spores/mL(-1) final concentration. The level of xylanse activity obtained in the culture filtrates of the mutant was a remarkable 820 U mL(-1) when the reducing sugar released was measured by the dinitrosalicylic acid method. This enzyme titre would appear to be the highest reported so far. The xylanases system contained the correct balance of enzymes to effect extensive hydrolysis of oat spelt xylan. The protease titre was very low.  相似文献   

8.
We isolated a thermophilic bacterium that produces both xylanase and beta-xylosidase. Based on taxonomical research, this bacterium was identified as Bacillus stearothermophilus. Each extracellular enzyme was separated by hydrophobic chromatography by using a Toyopearl HW-65 column, followed by gel filtration with a Sephacryl S-200 column. Each enzyme in the culture was further purified to homogeneity (62-fold for xylanase and 72-fold for beta-xylosidase) by using a fast protein liquid chromatography system with a Mono Q HR 5/5 column. The optimum temperatures were 60 degrees C for xylanase and 70 degrees C for beta-xylosidase. The isoelectric points and molecular masses were 5.1 and 39.5 kDa for xylanase and 4.2 and 150 kDa for beta-xylosidase, respectively. Heat treatment at 60 degrees C for 1 h did not cause inhibition of the activities of these enzymes. The action of the two enzymes on xylan gave only xylose.  相似文献   

9.
A xylanase, which produces exclusively xylobiose from oat spelt and birch xylans, was isolated from the culture medium of Aeromonas caviae ME-1. The enzyme (xylanase V) was purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydrophobic interaction, and ion-exchange and gel filtration chromatographies. The homogeneity of the final preparation was demonstrated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and agarose gel electrofocusing. The molecular mass and isoelectric point of the xylanase were 46 kDa and 5.4, respectively. Xylanase V had a maximum activity at a pH of 6.8 and at a temperature between 30 and 37 degrees C. It was relatively stable at a pH between 5.0 and 8.6 and a temperature between 25 and 37 degrees C. When soluble birch xylan was used as the substrate, the enzyme had a K(m) and V(max) of 2 mg/ml and 182 mumol of xylose equivalent liberated . min . mg of protein, respectively. By the action of xylanase V on xylans (from oat spelt and birch), only one product corresponding to xylobiose was observed by thin-layer chromatography. The xylanase V putative product was confirmed to be xylobiose by acid and enzymatic hydrolyses. The xylanase had neither beta-xylosidase, alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase, cellulase, nor beta-1,3-xylanase activities. Xylotriose was the shortest substrate which the enzyme could attack. These findings suggest that xylanase V is a novel enzyme that cleaves a xylobiose unit from one of the ends of xylans, probably by an exomechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Both beta-xylanase and beta-xylosidase were purified to homogeneity from a xylose-grown culture of Aureobasidium pullulans. Cellular distribution studies of enzyme activities revealed that beta-xylanase was an extracellular enzyme, during both the exponential and stationary phases, whereas beta-xylosidase was mostly periplasmic associated. The beta-xylanase exhibited very high specificity for xylan extracted from Eucalyptus grandis dissolving pulp, whereas the beta-xylosidase was only active on p-nitrophenyl xyloside and xylobiose. Comparison of kcat/Km ratios showed that the beta-xylanase hydrolyzed xylan from dissolving pulp 1.3, 2.1, and 2. 3 times more efficiently than Eucalyptus hemicellulose B, Eucalyptus hemicellulose A, and larchwood xylan, respectively. The beta-xylosidase exhibited a transxylosylation reaction during the hydrolysis of xylobiose. When applied on acid sulfite pulp, both enzymes released xylose and hydrolyzed xylan to a different extent. Although beta-xylosidase (0.4 U/g pulp) liberated more xylose from pulp than beta-xylanase (4.7 U/g pulp), it was responsible for only 3% of xylan solubilization. Treatment of pulp with beta-xylanase liberated 51.7 microgram of xylose/g and hydrolyzed 10% of xylan. The two enzymes acted additively on pulp and removed 12% of pulp xylan. A synergistic effect in terms of release of xylose from pulp was observed when the enzyme mixture of beta-xylanase and beta-xylosidase was supplemented with beta-mannanase. However, this did not result in further enzymatic degradation of pulp xylan. Both beta-xylanase and beta-xylosidase altered the carbohydrate composition of sulfite pulp by increasing the relative cellulose content at the expense of reduced hemicellulose content of pulp.  相似文献   

11.
Two distinct xylanase genes (designated xynA and xynB) were subcloned in pUC13 from non-homologous restriction fragments of Ruminococcus flavefaciens 17 DNA originally isolated in lambda EMBL3. The products of the two genes showed similar pH optima for hydrolysis of oat spelt xylan (around 5.5) and had little or no activity against carboxymethylcellulose. Trace activities against p-nitrophenyl (pNP) cellobioside and pNP-xyloside were detected in clones containing xynA, but not in one harbouring xynB. The xylanase associated with clones carrying xynA produced mainly xylobiose and xylose from xylan and did not give hydrolysis of xylobiose, while that encoded by xynB produced mainly xylobiose and higher xylo-oligosaccharides from xylan. There was evidence of increased expression, at the RNA level, of these two genes, and of another cloned region encoding multiple activities including xylanase, in R. flavefaciens 17 grown with xylan, as compared with cellobiose, as energy source. Total cell-associated xylanase and beta-xylosidase activities, and supernatant xylanase activity, were shown to be similarly induced in xylan-grown R. flavefaciens, 17.  相似文献   

12.
13C-n.m.r. study of C hordein.   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Insoluble xylan was prepared from ground birch (Betula pubescens) pulp by alkali extraction and precipitation with ethanol. The only sugar detected after acid hydrolysis of the preparation was xylose. The insoluble xylan was used as substrate in a nephelometric assay to determine the xylanase (EC 3.2.1.8, 1,4-beta-D-xylan xylanohydrolase and EC 3.2.1.37, 1,4-beta-D-xylan xylohydrolase) activities of Aspergillus and Trichoderma enzymes. The nephelometric method is reliable in evaluating xylanase hydrolysis of insoluble xylan.  相似文献   

13.
A Clostridium strain PXYL1 was isolated from a cold-adapted cattle manure biogas digester at 15 degrees C. It could grow at temperatures as low as 5 degrees C up to 50 degrees C with highest specific growth rate at 20 degrees C and is a psychrotroph. It produced extracellular hydrolytic enzymes namely xylanase, endoglucanase, beta-xylosidase, beta-glucosidase and filter paper cellulase, all of which had maximal activity at 20 degrees C. The induction of xylanase was highest on birch wood xylan (37 IU(mg protein)(-1)) compared with xylose (1.11 IU(mg protein)(-1)), cellobiose (1.43 IU(mg protein)(-1)) and glucose (no activity). The xylanase was thermolabile with a half-life of 30 min at 40 degrees C and 8 min at 50 degrees C but stable for over 2 h at 20 degrees C. The crude enzyme released reducing sugars (1.25 g l(-1)) from finger millet flour at 20 degrees C, while commercial food-grade xylanases showed no hydrolysis at this temperature. This is the first report of a Clostridium strain growing at 20 degrees C and producing an array of xylanolytic and cellulolytic enzymes, possessing low temperature optima of 20 degrees C, which may facilitate degradation of plant fibre under low-temperature conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The two major xylanases of Trichoderma reesei with different pI values and pH optima were compared for increasing the bleachability of pine kraft pulp. The efficiencies of the two enzymes acting on pulp substrate were very similar in hydrolysis yield, extraction kappa number or final brightness value. Only slight synergism between the two enzymes was observed in both hydrolysis and bleaching tests. The pH optimum of the pI 5.5 xylanase was similar in pulp treatment and in the hydrolysis of isolated substrates, and the bleaching result also correlated well with the hydrolysis of pulp xylan. By contrast, the pI 9.0 xylanase acted differently on pulp than on isolated xylans at different pH values and the pH optimum on pulp was increased. The bleachability of pulp by the pI 9.0 xylanase was improved more than expected at pH 7.0, although the hydrolysis of pulp xylan was substantially decreased. A similar phenomenon was also observed when the hydrolysis was performed in water instead of buffer. It thus appears that the degree of hydrolysis needed to obtain improved bleachability with pI 9.0 xylanase can be minimized by proper adjustment of the hydrolysis conditions. Correspondence to: J. Buchert  相似文献   

15.
Two endoxylanases were purified from the culture medium of Trichoderma longibrachiatum. Both enzymes were highly basic, and lacked activity on carboxymethyl-cellulose. An enzyme of 21.5 kDa (xylanase A) had a specific activity of 510 U/mg protein, a Km of 0.15 mg soluble xylan/ml, possessed transglycosidase activity and generated xylobiose and xylotriose as the major endproducts from xylan or xylose oligomers. A larger enzyme of 33 kDa (xylanase B) had a specific activity of 131 U/mg protein, a Km of 0.19 mg soluble xylan/ml, lacked detectable transglycosidase activity and generated xylobiose and xylose as major endproducts from xylan and xylose oligomers. Xylotriose was the smallest oligomer attacked by both enzymes. In addition, xylotriose inhibited hydrolysis of xylopentanose by both enzymes, while xylobiose appeared to inhibit xylanase B, but not xylanase A.  相似文献   

16.
Hemicellulose is one of the major forms of biomass in lignocellulose, and its essential component is xylan. We used a cell surface engineering system based on alpha-agglutinin to construct a Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast strain codisplaying two types of xylan-degrading enzymes, namely, xylanase II (XYNII) from Trichoderma reesei QM9414 and beta-xylosidase (XylA) from Aspergillus oryzae NiaD300, on the cell surface. In a high-performance liquid chromatography analysis, xylose was detected as the main product of the yeast strain codisplaying XYNII and XylA, while xylobiose and xylotriose were detected as the main products of a yeast strain displaying XYNII on the cell surface. These results indicate that xylan is sequentially hydrolyzed to xylose by the codisplayed XYNII and XylA. In a further step toward achieving the simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of xylan, a xylan-utilizing S. cerevisiae strain was constructed by codisplaying XYNII and XylA and introducing genes for xylose utilization, namely, those encoding xylose reductase and xylitol dehydrogenase from Pichia stipitis and xylulokinase from S. cerevisiae. After 62 h of fermentation, 7.1 g of ethanol per liter was directly produced from birchwood xylan, and the yield in terms of grams of ethanol per gram of carbohydrate consumed was 0.30 g/g. These results demonstrate that the direct conversion of xylan to ethanol is accomplished by the xylan-utilizing S. cerevisiae strain.  相似文献   

17.
The culture medium for Rhodothermus marinus was optimised on a shake-flask scale by using statistical factorial designs for enhanced production of a highly thermostable alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase (AFase). The medium containing 3.6 g/l birch wood xylan and 8.2 g/l yeast extract yielded a maximum of 110 nkat/ml AFase activity together with 125 nkat/ml xylanase and 65 nkat/ml beta-xylosidase activity. In addition, low levels of beta-mannanase (30 nkat/ml), alpha-galactosidase (0.2 nkat/ml), beta-galactosidase (0.3 nkat/ml), endoglucanase (5 nkat/ml) and beta-glucosidase (30 nkat/ml) were detected in the culture filtrate. Among the various carbon sources tested, birchwood xylan was most effective for the formation of AFase and xylanase activities, followed by oat spelt and beechwood xylans, and xylan-rich lignocelluoses (e.g., starch-free sugar beet pulp and wheat bran). Constitutive levels of enzyme activities were detected when the bacterium was grown on other polysaccharides and low-molecular-weight carbohydrates. A fermentation in a 5-l fermenter (3-l working volume) using the optimised medium yielded 60 nkat/ml AFase associated with 65 nkat/ml xylanase and 35 nkat/ml beta-xylosidase activities. The crude AFase displayed optimal activity between pH 5.5 and 7 and at 85 degrees C. It had half-lives of 8.3 h at 85 degrees C and 17 min at 90 degrees C. It showed high stability between pH 5 and 9 (24 h at 65 degrees C). The combined use of AFase-rich xylanase and mannanase from R. marinus in the prebleaching of softwood kraft pulp gave a brightness increase of 1.8% ISO. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the production of a high AFase activity by an extreme thermophilic bacterium and this enzyme is the most thermostable AFase reported so far.  相似文献   

18.
该文研究了木糖、木糖醇对木聚糖酶Shearzyme 500L酶解蔗渣木聚糖的影响。通过热带假丝酵母(Candida tropiclis)转化酶解副产物木糖,解除木糖对木聚糖酶的抑制作用,从而获得高木二糖含量的低聚木糖。结果表明:木糖是Shearzyme 500L的酶活性抑制物,其抑制作用与溶液中的木糖量成正比;木糖醇对木聚糖酶无抑制作用;热带假丝酵母可将蔗渣木聚糖酶解液中的木糖转化为木糖醇而不利用低聚木糖,木二糖占总糖比例由53.09%升高到62.92%,经二次酶解后,木二糖比例可达78.90%。  相似文献   

19.
alpha-l-Arabinofuranosidase was purified from culture filtrates of the thermoalkaliphilic Streptomyces sp. PC22 to about 108-fold purity by (NH(4))(2)SO(4) precipitation followed by column chromatography. Its approximate molecular weight was 404kDa, with a subunit mass of approximately 79kDa. The evaluated K(m) and V(max) values with p-nitrophenyl-alpha-l-arabinofuranoside as substrate were 0.23mM and 124 U.mg(-1), respectively. The purified enzyme was optimally active at 65 degrees C and pH 6.0 and showed a mild but significant synergistic effect in combination with other xylanolytic enzymes, including xylanase, beta-xylosidase and acetyl esterase, on the degradation of oat-spelt xylan, corn cob and corn husk substrates with a 1.25, 1.32 and 1.21-fold increase in the amount of reducing sugar released, respectively, compared to the expected (additive) amounts for the individual enzymes acting alone. Sequential reactions using two xylan-backbone degrading enzymes (xylanase/beta-xylosidase) and two debranching enzymes (alpha-l-arabinofuranosidase/acetyl esterase) were also determined. The highest degree of synergy was obtained in sequential reactions with the debranching enzyme digestion preceding the xylan-backbone degrading enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Two thermophilic xylanases (xylanase II from Thielavia terrestris 255B and the 32-kDa xylanase from Thermoascus crustaceus 235E) were studied to determine if they had different and complementary modes of action when they hydrolysed various types of xylans. Partial amino acid sequencing showed that these two enzymes belonged to different families of -1,4-glycanases. Xylanase II achieved faster solubilization of insoluble xylan whereas the 32-kDa xylanase was more effective in producing xylose and short xylooligomers. An assessment of the combined hydrolytic action of the two xylanases did not reveal any co-operative action. The sugars released when the two thermophilic xylanases were used together were almost identical to those released when the 32-kDa xylanase acted alone. The two xylanases were able to remove about 12% of the xylan remaining in an aspen kraft pulp. This indicated that either one of these thermophilic enzymes may be useful for enhancing the bleaching of kraft pulps. Correspondence to: J. N. Saddler  相似文献   

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