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1.
A novel haloalkaliphilic, thermostable serine protease was purified from the extreme halophilic archaeon, Halogeometricum borinquense strain TSS101. The protease was isolated from a stationary phase culture, purified 116-fold with 18% yield and characterized biochemically. The molecular mass of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 86 kDa. The enzyme showed the highest activity at 60 degrees C and pH 10.0 in 20% NaCl. The enzyme had high activity over the pH range from 6.0 to 10.0. Enzymatic activity was strongly inhibited by 1 mM phenyl methylsulfonyl fluoride, but activity was increased 59% by 0.1% cetyltrimethylammonium bromide. The enzyme exhibited relatively high thermal stability, retaining 80% of its activity after 1 h at 90 degrees C. Thermostability increased in the presence of Ca2+. The stability of the enzyme was maintained in 10% sucrose and in the absence of NaCl.  相似文献   

2.
An extremely halophilic Chromohalobacter sp. TVSP101 was isolated from solar salterns and screened for the production of extracellular halothermophilic protease. Identification of the bacterium was done based upon biochemical tests and the 16S rRNA sequence. The partially purified enzyme displayed maximum activity at pH 8 and required 4.5 M of NaCl for optimum proteolytic activity. In addition, this enzyme was thermophilic and active in broad range of temperature 60–80°C with 80°C as optimum. The Chromohalobacter sp. required 4 M NaCl for its optimum growth and protease secretion and no growth was observed below 1 M of NaCl. The initial pH of the medium for growth and enzyme production was in the range 7.0–8.0 with optimum at pH 7.2. Various cations at 1 mM concentration in the growth medium had no significant effect in enhancing the growth and enzyme production but 0.5 M MgCl2 concentration enhanced enzyme production. Casein or skim milk powder 1% (w/v) along with 1% peptone proved to be the best nitrogen sources for maximum biomass and enzyme production. The carbon sources glucose and glycerol repressed the protease secretion. Immobilization of whole cells in absence of NaCl proved to be useful for continuous production of halophilic protease.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of various organic solvents on the activity and stability of an extracellular protease produced by the haloalkaliphilic archaeon Natrialba magadii was tested. This protease was active and stable in aqueous-organic solvent mixtures containing 1.5 M NaCl and glycerol, dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), N,N-dimethyl formamide, propylenglycol, and dioxane. Among the solvents tested, DMSO, propylenglycol, and glycerol were effective in preserving enzyme stability in suboptimal NaCl concentrations. The stabilizing effect of DMSO on this haloalkaliphilic protease was more efficient at pH 8 than at pH 10, suggesting that DMSO may not substitute for salt to allow halophilic proteins to withstand the effect of high pH values. These results show that Nab. magadii extracellular protease is a solvent tolerant enzyme and suggest a potential application of this haloalkaliphilic protease in aqueous-organic solvent biocatalysis.  相似文献   

4.
An extracellular protease was produced under stress conditions of high temperature and high salinity by a newly isolated moderate halophile, Salinivibrio sp. strain AF-2004 in a basal medium containing peptone, beef extract, glucose and NaCl. A modification of Kunitz method was used for protease assay. The isolate was capable of producing protease in the presence of sodium chloride, sodium sulfate, sodium nitrate, sodium nitrite, potassium chloride, sodium acetate and sodium citrate. The maximum protease was secreted in the presence of 7.5 to 10% (w/v) sodium sulfate or 3% (w/v) sodium acetate (4.6 U ml−1). Various carbon sources including glucose, lactose, casein and peptone were capable of inducing enzyme production. The optimum pH, temperature and aeration for enzyme production were 9.0, 32 °C and 220 rpm, respectively. The enzyme production corresponded with growth and reached a maximum level during the mid-stationary phase. Maximum protease activity was exhibited in the medium containing 1% (w/v) NaCl at 60 °C, with 18% and 41% activity reductions at temperature 50 and 70 °C, respectively. The optimum pH for enzyme activity was 8.5, with 86% and 75% residual activities at pH 10 and 6, respectively. The activity of enzyme was inhibited by EDTA. These results suggest that the protease secreted by Salinivibrio sp. strain AF-2004 is industrially important from the perspectives of its activity at a broad pH ranges (5.0–10.0), its moderate thermoactivity in addition to its high tolerance to a wide range of salt concentration (0–10% NaCl).  相似文献   

5.
In this study, some parameters for the production and caseinolytic activity of an extracellular thermostable acid protease from a thermoacidophilic archaeon Thermoplasma volcanium were determined. The highest level of growth and enzyme production were detected at pH 3.0 over an incubation period of 192 h at 60 degrees C. The pH optimum for the acid protease activity was 3.0 and the enzyme was fairly stable over a broad pH range (pH 3.0-8.0). The temperature for maximum activity of the enzyme was 55 degrees C and activity remained stable between 50 degrees C and 70 degrees C. These features could be of relevance for various biotechnological applications of this enzyme. Serine-(PMSF), cysteine-(DTT), metallo-(EDTA) and aspartate-(pepstatin) protease inhibitors did not inhibit the caseinolytic activity of the enzyme. Therefore, Tp. volcanium acid protease could be a member of the pepstatin-insensitive carboxyl proteinases.  相似文献   

6.
A metalloprotease secreted by the moderately halophilic bacterium Salinivibrio sp. strain AF-2004 when the culture reached the stationary growth phase. This enzyme was purified to homogeneity by acetone precipitation and subsequent Q-Sepharose anion exchange and Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration chromatography. The apparent molecular mass of the protease was 31 kDa by SDS-PAGE, whereas it was estimated as approximately 29 kDa by Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration. The purified protease had a specific activity of 116.8 mumol of tyrosine/min per mg protein on casein. The optimum temperature and salinity of the enzyme were at 55 degrees C and 0-0.5 M NaCl, although at salinities up to 4 M NaCl activity still remained. The protease was stable and had a broad pH profile (5.0-10.0) with an optimum of 8.5 for casein hydrolysis. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by phenylmethyl sulfonylfluoride (PMSF), Pefabloc SC, chymostatin and also EDTA, indicating that it belongs to the class of serine metalloproteases. The protease in solutions containing water-soluble organic solvents or alcohols was more stable than that in the absence of organic solvents. These characteristics make it an ideal choice for applications in industrial processes containing organic solvents and/or salts.  相似文献   

7.
A protease of a molecular mass of approximately 30 kDa was isolated and purified from the haloalkaliphilic archaeon Natronomonas (formerly Natronobacterium) pharaonis. The enzyme hydrolyzed synthetic peptides, preferentially at the carboxyl terminus of phenylalanine or leucine, as well as large proteins. Hydrolysis occurred over the range of pH from 6 to 12, with an optimum at pH 10. The temperature optimum was 61°C. The enzyme was nearly equally active over the range of salt concentration from 0.5 to 4 M (NaCl or KCl). A strong cross-reaction with a polyclonal antiserum against human chymotrypsin was observed. Enzymatic activity was inhibited by typical serine protease inhibitors. There was significant homology between N-terminal and internal sequences from autolytic fragments and the sequence of bovine chymotrypsinogen B; the overall amino acid composition was similar to that of vertebrate chymotrypsinogens. Evidence for a zymogen-like processing of the protease was obtained. Cell extracts from other halobacteria exhibited similar proteolytic activity and immunoreactivity. The data suggested a widespread distribution of a chymotrypsinogen B-like protease among halo- and haloalkaliphilic Archaea. Received: September 12, 1998 / Accepted: December 15, 1998  相似文献   

8.
采用bacitracin-Sepharose 4B亲和层析的方法得到凝胶电泳均一的来自极端嗜盐古生菌(Natrinema sp.)R6-5的胞外嗜盐蛋白酶。经SDS-PAGE分析该酶亚基分子量为62kDa。PMSF对它的活性完全抑制,表明它是一种丝氨酸蛋白酶,该酶反应的最适NaCl浓度为3mol/L,最适温度为45℃,最适pH值为8.0。在高盐条件下能维持高活性并十分稳定,具有重要的潜在应用价值。  相似文献   

9.
The production of a protease was investigated under conditions of high salinity by the moderately halophilic bacterium Halobacillus karajensis strain MA-2 in a basal medium containing peptone, beef extract, maltose and NaCl when the culture reached the stationary growth phase. Effect of various temperatures, initial pH, salt and different nutrient sources on protease production revealed that the maximum secretion occurred at 34°C, pH 8.0–8.5, and in the presence of gelatin. Replacement of NaCl by various concentrations of sodium nitrate in the basal medium also increased the protease production. The secreted protease was purified 24-fold with 68% recovery by a simple approach including a combination of acetone precipitation and Q-Sepharose ion exchange chromatography. The enzyme revealed a monomeric structure with a relative molecular mass of 36 kDa by running on SDS-PAGE. Maximum caseinolytic activity of the enzyme was observed at 50°C, pH 9.0 and 0.5 M NaCl, although at higher salinities (up to 3 M) activity still remained. The maximum enzyme activity was obtained at a broad pH range of 8.0–10.0, with 55 and 50% activity remaining at pH 6 and 11, respectively. Moreover, the enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), Pefabloc SC and EDTA; indicating that it probably belongs to the subclass of serine metalloproteases. These findings suggest that the protease secreted by Halobacillus karajensis has a potential for biotechnological applications from its haloalkaline properties point of view.  相似文献   

10.
As much as 84% of the thermostable serine protease from Thermomonospora fusca strain YX was covalently attached to silanized glass using glutaraldehyde. The immobilized protease exhibited a higher temperature optimum (86 degrees C) and pH optimum (9.4) for activity compared to soluble YX-protease (80 degrees C and pH 9.0, respectively). Immobilization improved enzyme thermo-stability above 90 degrees C and reduced inactivation during prolonged storage (9% loss of activity after 90 days at 12 degrees C). A continuous-flow column reactor packed with immobilized protease readily hydrolyzed casein over broad ranges of temperature and pH.  相似文献   

11.
Thirty-eight haloalkaliphilic bacterial strains were isolated from Sambhar Salt Lake, India and screened for their ability to secrete haloalkaliphilic proteases. Among them, a moderately halophilic, mesophilic and alkaliphilic potent strain Geomicrobium sp. EMB2 produced an extracellular protease, which was remarkably stable in organic solvents, salt, surfactants, detergents and alkaline pH. Statistically based experimental designs were applied to study the interactions and optimization of medium constituents for efficient protease production by Geomicrobium sp. EMB2. An overall 20-fold increase in protease production was achieved in the optimized medium (721 U/ml) as compared with the unoptimized medium (37 U/ml). The high production level coupled with novel properties makes it a prospective industrial enzyme. The Geomicrobium sp. EMB2 isolate is deposited in Microbial Type Culture Collection, Chandigarh, India with accession number MTCC 10310.  相似文献   

12.
A hyperthermophilic archaeon strain, KOD1, was isolated from a solfatara at a wharf on Kodakara Island, Kagoshima, Japan. The growth temperature of the strain ranged from 65 to 100 degrees C, and the optimal temperature was 95 degrees C. The anaerobic strain was an S0-dependent heterotroph. Cells were irregular cocci and were highly motile with several polar flagella. The membrane lipid was of the ether type, and the GC content of the DNA was estimated to be 38 mol%. The 16S rRNA sequence was 95% homologous to that of Pyrococcus abyssi. The optimum growth pH and NaCl concentration of the strain KOD1 were 7.0 and 3%, respectively. Therefore, strain KOD1 was identified as a Pyrococcus sp. Strain KOD1 produced at least three extracellular proteases. One of the most thermostable proteases was purified 21-fold, and the molecular size was determined to be 44 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and 45 kDa by gel filtration chromatography. The specific activity of the purified protease was 2,160 U/mg of protein. The enzyme exhibited its maximum activity at approximately pH 7.0 and at a temperature of 110 degrees with azocasein as a substrate. The enzyme activity was completely retained after heat treatment at 90 degrees C for 2 h, and the half-life of enzymatic activity at 100 degrees C was 60 min. The proteolytic activity was significantly inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzoic acid or E-64 but not by EDTA or phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. Proteolytic activity was enhanced threefold in the presence of 8 mM cysteine. These experimental results indicated that the enzyme was a thermostable thiol protease.  相似文献   

13.
A gene encoding an extracellular protease, sptA, was cloned from the halophilic archaeon Natrinema sp. J7. It encoded a polypeptide of 565 amino acids containing a putative 49-amino acid signal peptide, a 103-amino acid propeptide, as well as a mature region and C-terminal extension, with a high proportion of acidic amino acid residues. The sptA gene was expressed in Haloferax volcanii WFD11, and the recombinant enzyme could be secreted into the medium as an active mature form. The N-terminal amino acid sequencing and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry analysis of the purified SptA protease indicated that the 152-amino acid prepropeptide was cleaved and the C-terminal extension was not processed after secretion. The SptA protease was optimally active at 50°C in 2.5 M NaCl at pH 8.0. The NaCl removed enzyme retained 20% of its activity, and 60% of the activity could be restored by reintroducing 2.5 M NaCl into the NaCl removed enzyme. When the twin-arginine motif in the signal peptide of SptA protease was replaced with a twin-lysine motif, the enzyme was not exported from Hfx. volcanii WFD11, suggesting that the SptA protease was a Tat-dependent substrate.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available to authorised users in the online version of this article at .  相似文献   

14.
A halophilic isolate Salimicrobium halophilum strain LY20 producing extracellular amylase and protease was isolated from Yuncheng, China. Production of both enzymes was synchronized with bacterial growth and reached a maximum level during the early-stationary phase. The amylase and protease were purified to homogeneity with molecular weights of 81 and 30?kDa, respectively. Optimal amylase activity was observed at 70?°C, pH 10.0% and 10% NaCl. Complete inhibition by EDTA, diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC), and phenylarsine oxide (PAO) indicated that the amylase was a metalloenzyme with histidine and cysteine residues essential for its catalysis. Maltose was the main product of starch hydrolysis, indicating an β-amylase activity. The purified protease from LY20 showed highest activity at 80?°C, pH 10.0% and 12.5% NaCl. Complete inhibition was shown by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, DEPC, and PAO, indicating that the enzyme probably belonged to the subclass of the serine proteases with histidine and cysteine residues essential for catalysis. Furthermore, both enzymes were highly stable over broad temperature (30-80?°C), pH (6.0-12.0) and NaCl concentration (2.5-20%) ranges, showing excellent thermostable, alkalistable, and halotolerant nature. The surfactants (SDS, Tween 80, and Triton X-100) did not affect their activities. In addition, both enzymes from LY20 displayed remarkable stability in the presence of water-soluble organic solvents with log P(ow) (?) ≤?-0.24.  相似文献   

15.
A halophilic and alkali-tolerant Chromohalobacter sp. TPSV 101 with an ability to produce extracellular halophilic, alkali-tolerant and moderately thermostable xylanase was isolated from solar salterns. Identification of the bacterium was done based upon biochemical tests and 16S rRNA sequence. The culture conditions for higher xylanase production were optimized with respect to NaCl, pH, temperature, substrates and metal ions and additives. Maximum xylanase production was achieved in the medium with 20% NaCl, pH-9.0 at 40°C supplemented with 1% (w/v) sugarcane bagasse and 0.5% feather hydrolysate as carbon and nitrogen sources. Sugarcane bagasse (250 U/ml) and wheat bran (190 U/ml) were the best inducer of xylanase when used as carbon source as compared to xylan (61 U/ml). The xylanase that was partially purified by protein concentrator had a molecular mass of 15 kDa approximately. The xylanase from Chromohalobacter sp. TPSV 101 was active at pH 9.0 and required 20% NaCl for optimal xylanolytic activity and was active over a broad range of temperature 40–80°C with 65°C as optimum. The early stage hydrolysis products of sugarcane bagasse were xylose and xylobiose, after longer periods of incubation only xylose was detected.  相似文献   

16.
A halophilic archaeon, Halorubrum sp. strain Ha25, produced extracellular halophilic organic solvent-tolerant amylopullulanase. The maximum enzyme production was at high salt concentration, 3–4 M NaCl. Optimum pH and temperature for enzyme production were 7.0 and 40 °C, respectively. Molecular mass of purified enzyme was estimated to be about 140 kDa by SDS–PAGE. This enzyme was active on pullulan and starch as substrates. The apparent K m for the enzyme activity on pullulan was 4 mg/ml and for soluble starch was 1.8 mg/ml. Optimum temperature for amylolytic and pullulytic activities was 50 °C. Optimum pH for amylolytic activity was 7 and for pullulytic activity was 7.5. This enzyme was active over a wide range of concentrations (0–4.5 M) of NaCl. The effect of organic solvents on the enzyme activities showed that this enzyme was more stable in the presence of non-polar organic solvents than polar solvents. This study is the first report on amylopullulanase production in halophilic bacteria and archaea.  相似文献   

17.
A serine protease secreted by the haloalkaliphilic archaeon Natrialba magadii at the end of the exponential growth phase was isolated. This enzyme was purified 83 fold with a total yield of 25% by ethanol precipitation, affinity chromatography, and gel filtration. The native molecular mass of the enzyme determined by gel filtration was 45 kDa. Na. magadii extracellular protease was dependent on high salt concentrations for activity and stability, and it had an optimum temperature of 60°C in the presence of 1.5 M NaCl. The enzyme was stable and had a broad pH profile (6–12) with an optimum pH of 8–10 for azocasein hydrolysis. The protease was strongly inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP), phenylmethyl sulfonylfluoride (PMSF), and chymostatin, indicating that it is a serine protease. It was sensitive to denaturing agents such as SDS, urea, and guanidine HCl and activated by thiol-containing reducing agents such as dithiotreitol (DTT) and 2-mercaptoethanol. This protease degraded casein and gelatin and showed substrate specificity for synthetic peptides containing Phe, Tyr, and Leu at the carboxyl terminus, showing that it has chymotrypsin-like activity. Na. magadii protease presented no cross-reactivity with polyclonal antibodies raised against the extracellular protease of Natronococcus occultus, suggesting that although these proteases share several biochemical traits, they might be antigenically unrelated. Received: October 1, 1999 / Accepted: February 1, 2000  相似文献   

18.
Marine endosymbiontic Roseobacter sp. (MMD040), which produced high yields of protease, was isolated from marine sponge Fasciospongia cavernosa, collected from the peninsular coast of India. Maximum production of enzyme was obtained in Luria-Bertani broth. Catabolite repression was observed when the medium was supplemented with readily available carbon sources. The optimum temperature and pH for the enzyme production was 37 degrees C and 7.0, respectively. The enzyme exhibited maximum activity in pH range of 6-9 with an optimum pH of 8.0 and retained nearly 92.5% activity at pH 9.0. The enzyme was stable at 40 degrees C and showed 89% activity at 50 degrees C. Based on the present findings, the enzyme was characterized as thermotolerant alkaline protease, which can be developed for industrial applications.  相似文献   

19.
A thermostable alkaline alpha-amylase producing Bacillus sp. A3-15 was isolated from compost samples. There was a slight variation in amylase synthesis within the pH range 6.0 and 12.0 with an optimum pH of 8.5 (8mm zone diameter in agar medium) on starch agar medium. Analyses of the enzyme for molecular mass and amylolytic activity were carried out by starch SDS-PAGE electrophoresis, which revealed two independent bands (86,000 and 60,500 Da). Enzyme synthesis occurred at temperatures between 25 and 65 degrees C with an optimum of 60 degrees C on petri dishes. The partial purification enzyme showed optimum activity at pH 11.0 and 70 degrees C. The enzyme was highly active (95%) in alkaline range of pH (10.0-11.5), and it was almost completely active up to 100 degrees C with 96% of the original activity remaining after heat treatment at 100 degrees C for 30 min. Enzyme activity was enhanced in the presence of 5mM CaCl2 (130%) and inhibition with 5mM by ZnCl2, NaCl, Na-sulphide, EDTA, PMSF (3mM), Urea (8M) and SDS (1%) was obtained 18%, 20%, 36%, 5%, 10%, 80% and 18%, respectively. The enzyme was stable approximately 70% at pH 10.0-11.0 and 60 degrees C for 24h. So our result showed that the enzyme was both, highly thermostable-alkaline, thermophile and chelator resistant. The A3-15 amylase enzyme may be suitable in liquefaction of starch in high temperature, in detergent and textile industries and in other industrial applications.  相似文献   

20.
AIMS: The effect of various nitrogen sources and nutritional starvation was examined on the production of an extracellular protease secreted by the haloalkaliphilic archaeon Natrialba magadii. METHODS AND RESULTS: Cell growth and proteolytic activity were measured in cells grown with different nitrogen sources. Proteolytic activity was produced in complex and easily metabolized nitrogen sources such as yeast extract, casein and casamino acids; meanwhile, ammonium repressed enzyme production. The time course and amount of protease accumulated showed an inverse correlation with growth rate and nutrient concentration. Starvation did not induce extracellular protease production. CONCLUSION: The accumulation of Nab. magadii extracellular protease is stimulated by nutrient limitation and slow growth rate indicating that it is probably induced in response to a deficit in the energetic status of the cells. Nutritional starvation did not induce protease accumulation suggesting that de novo synthesis of this protease and/or factor/s necessary for its activation are required. This enzyme may be regulated by nitrogen catabolite repression and it does not require protein substrates for induction. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: These results contribute to the basic knowledge on protease regulation in haloalkaliphilic archaea and will help to optimize the production of this extremozyme for biotechnological applications such as protease-catalysed peptide synthesis.  相似文献   

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