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1.
To evaluate the potential of using the enzymes from spent mushroom compost (SMC) as an industrial enzyme, the production of alpha-amylase, cellulase, beta-glucosidase, laccase, and xylanase was determined from the SMC of four edible mushroom species (Pleurotus ostreatus, Lentinula edodes, Flammulina velutipes and Hericium erinaceum). Among the tested SMC, the SMC of L. edodes showed the highest enzyme activity in alpha-amylase (229 nkat/g), cellulase (759 nkat/g) and beta-glucosidase (767 nkat/g) in 0.5% Triton X-100, and that of P. ostreatus showed the highest activity in laccase (1452 nkat/g) in phosphate-buffered 0.2% Triton X-100. The highest xylanase activity (119 nkat/g) was found in the SMC of F. velutipes.  相似文献   

2.
A novel process for the production of extracellular carboxymethylcellulase (CMCase) and xylanase by fermentation under nonaseptic or nonsterile conditions is described. The fermentation process is carried out under very acidic conditions of pH 2.0 by using a acidophilic cellulolytic fungus. Microbial contamination is avoided or minimized to an insignificant level under this acid pH condition. The culture medium for this production consists of a carbon source from cellulosics or lignocellulosics, such as Na-CMC, xylan, Avicel cellulose, cellulose powder, alpha-cellulose, sawdust, etc., or a mixture of the forementioned together with simple ingredients such as (NH(4))(2)SO(4), K(2)HPO(4), MgSO(4) and NaNO(3). The fermentation is carried out at room temperature (28-30 degrees C), under aerobic conditions, and without controlling the pH. The CMCase and xylanase produced are stable under very simple storage conditions, such as in the fresh culture medium not containing the substrate for a period of 3 days, at any temperature from 0 to 30 degrees C. These extracellular enzymes have an optimum pH around 3, with the best range of pH from 2.0 to 3.6, for any temperature between 15 and 60 degrees C. The optimum temperatures are 55 degrees C for CMCase activity and 25-50 degrees C for xylanase activity, at any pH between 2.0 and 5.2. The apparent Michaelis constants Km are 2.6 and 1.5 mg/mL for CMCase and xylanase of the culture filtrate, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
Ten different strains of Thermomyces lanuginosus, isolated from composting soils were found to produce phytase when grown on PSM medium. The wild type strain CM was found to produce maximum amount ofphytase (4.33 units/g DW substrate). Culturing T. lanuginosus strain CM on medium containing wheat bran and optimizing other culture conditions (carbon source, media type, nitrogen source, level of nitrogen, temperature, pH, inoculum age, inoculum level and moisture), increased the phytase yield to 13.26 units/g substrate. This culture was further subjected to UV mutagenesis for developing phytase hyperproducing mutants. The mutant (TL-7) showed 2.29-fold increase in phytase activity as compared to the parental strain. Employing Box-Behnken factor factorial design of response surface methodology resulted in optimized phytase production (32.19 units/g of substrate) by mutant TL-7. A simple two-step purification (40.75-folds) ofphytase from mutant TL-7 was achieved by anion exchange and gel filtration chromatography. The purified phytase (approximately 54 kDa) was characterized to be optimally active at pH 5.0 and temperature 70 degrees C, though the enzyme showed approximately 70% activity over a wide pH and temperature range (2.0-10.0 and 30-90 degrees C, respectively). The phytase showed broad substrate specificity with activity against sodium phytate, ADP and riboflavin phosphate. The phytase from T. lanuginosus was thermoacidstable as it showed up to 70% residual activity after exposure to 70 degrees C at pH 3.0 for 120 min. The enzyme showed Km 4.55 microM and Vmax 0.833 microM/min/mg against sodium phytate as substrate.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
A gene (Ncphy) encoding a putative phytase in Neurospora crassa was cloned and expressed in Pichia pastoris, and the biochemical properties of the recombinant protein were examined in relation to the phytic acid hydrolysis in animal feed. The recombinant phytase (rNcPhy) hydrolyzed phytic acid with a specific activity of 125 U mg-1, Km of 228 micromol L-1, Vmax of 0.31 nmol (phosphate) s-1 mg-1, a temperature optimum of 60 degrees C and a pH optimum of 5.5 and a second pH optimum of 3.5. The enzyme displayed pH stability around pH 3.5-9.5 and showed satisfactory thermostability at 80 degrees C. The phytase from N. crassa has potential for improving animal feed processing at higher temperatures.  相似文献   

6.
Optimization of phytase production by solid substrate fermentation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The production of phytase by three feed-grade filamentous fungi (Aspergillus ficuum NRRL 3135, Mucor racemosus NRRL 1994 and Rhizopus oligosporus NRRL 5905) on four commonly used natural feed ingredients (canola meal, cracked corn, soybean meal, wheat bran) was studied in solid substrate fermentation (SSF). A. ficuum NRRL 3135 had the highest yield [15 IU phytase activity/g dry matter (DM)] on wheat bran. By optimizing the supplementation of wheat bran with starch and (NH4)2SO4, phytase production increased to 25 IU/g DM. Optimization was carried out by Plackett-Burman and central composite experimental designs. Using optimized medium, phytase, phosphatase, alpha-amylase and xylanase production by A. ficuum NRRL 3135 was studied in Erlenmeyer flask and tray SSF. By scaling up SSF from flasks to stationary trays, activities of 20 IU phytase activity/g DM were reproducibly obtained. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

7.
从弗氏柠檬酸杆菌(Citrobacter freundii)中分离纯化了一种植酸酶并进行了酶学性质研究,其反应最适pH为4.0~4.5,最适温度为40℃,在37℃下以植酸钠为底物的Km值为0.85nmol/L,Vmax为0.53IU/(mg.min),具有较好的抗胰蛋白酶的能力。酶蛋白的分子量大小约为45kDa,成熟酶蛋白N端序列为QCAPEGYQLQQVLMM。  相似文献   

8.
Aspergillus ficuum TUB F-1165 and Rhizopus oligosporus TUB F-1166 produced extra-cellular phytase during solid-state fermentation (SSF) using polystyrene as inert support. Maximal enzyme production (10.07 U/g dry substrate (U/gds) for A. ficuum and 4.52 U/gds for R. oligosporus) was observed when SSF was carried out with substrate pH 6.0 and moisture 58.3%, incubation temperature 30 degrees C, inoculum size of 1.3 x 10(7) spores/5 g substrate, for 72 h for A. ficuum and with substrate pH 7.0 and moisture 58.3%, incubation temperature 30 degrees C, inoculum size of 1 x 10(6) spores/5 g substrate for 96 h for R. oligosporus. Results indicated scope for production of phytase using polystyrene as inert support.  相似文献   

9.
Phytases catalyze the hydrolysis of phytic acid (InsP6, myo-inositol hexakisphosphate), the most abundant inositol phosphate in cells. In cereal grains and legumes, it constitutes 3-5% of the dry weight of seeds. The inability of humans and monogastric animals such as swine and poultry to absorb complexed InsP6 has led to nutritional and environmental problems. The efficacy of supplemental phytases to address these issues is well established; thus, there is a need for phytases with a range of biochemical and biophysical properties for numerous applications. An alkaline phytase that shows unique catalytic properties was isolated from plant tissues. In this paper, we report on the biochemical properties of an alkaline phytase from pollen grains of Lilium longiflorum. The enzyme exhibits narrow substrate specificity, it hydrolyzed InsP6 and para-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP). Alkaline phytase followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a K(m) of 81 microM and V(max) of 217 nmol Pi/min/mg with InsP6 and a K(m) of 372 microM and V(max) of 1272 nmol Pi/min/mg with pNPP. The pH optimum was 8.0 with InsP6 as the substrate and 7.0 with pNPP. Alkaline phytase was activated by calcium and inactivated by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; however, the enzyme retained a low level of activity even in Ca2+-free medium. Fluoride as well as myo-inositol hexasulfate did not have any inhibitory affect, whereas vanadate inhibited the enzyme. The enzyme was activated by sodium chloride and potassium chloride and inactivated by magnesium chloride; the activation by salts followed the Hofmeister series. The temperature optimum for hydrolysis is 55 degrees C; the enzyme was stable at 55 degrees C for about 30 min. The enzyme has unique properties that suggest the potential to be useful as a feed supplement.  相似文献   

10.
Extracellular phytase produced by Aspergillus niger ATCC 9142 was purified to homogeneity by employing an initial ultrafiltration step, followed by chromatography using ion exchange, gel filtration and chromatofocusing steps. The purified enzyme was an 84 kDa, monomeric protein. It possessed a temperature optimum of 65 degrees C, and a pH optimum of 5.0. Km and Vmax values of 100 microM and 7 nmol/s, respectively, were recorded and these values fall well within the range of those previously reported for microbial phytases. Substrate specificity studies indicated that, while the enzyme could hydrolyse a range of non-phytate-based phosphorylated substrates, its preferred substrate was phytate. Phytase activity was moderately stimulated in the presence of Mg2+, Mn2+, Cu2+, Cd2+, Hg2+, Zn2+ and F- ions. Activity was not significantly affected by Fe2- or Fe3- and was moderately inhibited by Ca2+. The enzyme displayed higher thermostability at 80 degrees C than did two commercial phytase products. Initial characterisation of the purified enzyme suggested that it could be a potential candidate for use as an animal feed supplement.  相似文献   

11.
Thermomyces lanuginosus, isolated from self-heated jute stacks in Bangladesh, was studied for production of high level of cellulase-free thermostable xylanase at 50°C using xylan. Optimization of the medium composition was carried out on shake-flask level using Graeco-Latin square technique. This increased xylanase production from 527 nkat ml−1 in the original medium to 9168–9502 nkat ml−1 in the optimized medium under optimized culture conditions e.g. initial medium pH (6.0–6.5), culture temperature (50°C) and time (5–6 d). The lag phase was very much shorter in the laboratory reactor compared to which existed in the shake cultures and 7111 nkat of xylanase activity were obtained per ml of culture filtrate at 60 h of cultivation. With a 15 min reaction time, the optimal pH and temperature for the xylanase activity were at 6.5 and 65°C, respectively. The enzyme was almost stable over a broad range of pH 3–9 at 20°C, with an optimum stability at pH 6.5. After 51 h heating at 50°C the enzyme retained 60%, 100% and 90% activity at pH 5.0, 6.5 and 8.0, respectively. The crude enzyme could hydrolyse xylan effectively and in only 6 h 67.3%, 54.0% and 49.2% saccharifications were achieved for 2%, 5% and 10% substrate levels, respectively. The principal product of hydrolysis was xylobiose together with smaller amounts of xylooligosaccharides (degree of polymerization 3–7) and xylose.  相似文献   

12.
An acid phosphatase with phytase activity, produced by Mucor hiemalis Wehmer, was purified to homogeneity by a combination of anion exchange, gel filtration and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The monomeric, glycosylated enzyme displayed maximum activity at 55 degrees C and pH 5.0-5.5. When compared to commercialised products, the enzyme is more thermostable (80 degrees C, 5min), displays a broader pH versus activity profile and greater stability under simulated digestive tract conditions. Unlike commercial phytases, the Mucor enzyme should retain some activity in the small intestine as well as in the stomach, facilitating a longer duration of action and hence more extensive substrate hydrolysis. Substrate specificity studies and protein database similarity searching using mass spectrometry-derived sequence data indicate that the enzyme is an acid phosphatase with activity on phytate. Cocktails containing acid phosphatases in combination with true phytases have been shown to promote more extensive phytate degradation than do true phytases alone. This, coupled to the enzyme's functionally relevant physicochemical characteristics, suggests its likely suitability for inclusion in second generation phytase cocktails for application in animal feed.  相似文献   

13.
The extracellular amylolytic enzymes of Schwanniomyces alluvius were studied to determine future optimization of this yeast for the production of industrial ethanol from starch. Both alpha-amylase and glucoamylase were isolated and purified. alpha-Amylase had an optimum pH of 6.3 and was stable from pH 4.5 to 7.5. The optimum temperature for the enzyme was 40 degrees C, but it was quickly inactivated at temperatures above 40 degrees C. The Km for soluble starch was 0.364 mg/ml. The molecular weight was calculated to be 61,900 +/- 700. alpha-Amylase was capable of releasing glucose from starch, but not from pullulan. Glucoamylase had an optimum pH of 5.0 and was stable from pH 4.0 to greater than 8.0. The optimum temperature for the enzyme was 50 degrees C, and although less heat sensitive than alpha-amylase, it was quickly inactivated at 60 degrees C. Km values were 12.67 mg/ml for soluble starch and 0.72 mM for maltose. The molecular weight was calculated to be 155,000 +/- 3,000. Glucoamylase released only glucose from both soluble starch and pullulan. S. alluvius is one of the very few yeasts to possess both alpha-amylase and glucoamylase as well as some fermentative capacity to produce ethanol.  相似文献   

14.
The extracellular amylolytic enzymes of Schwanniomyces alluvius were studied to determine future optimization of this yeast for the production of industrial ethanol from starch. Both alpha-amylase and glucoamylase were isolated and purified. alpha-Amylase had an optimum pH of 6.3 and was stable from pH 4.5 to 7.5. The optimum temperature for the enzyme was 40 degrees C, but it was quickly inactivated at temperatures above 40 degrees C. The Km for soluble starch was 0.364 mg/ml. The molecular weight was calculated to be 61,900 +/- 700. alpha-Amylase was capable of releasing glucose from starch, but not from pullulan. Glucoamylase had an optimum pH of 5.0 and was stable from pH 4.0 to greater than 8.0. The optimum temperature for the enzyme was 50 degrees C, and although less heat sensitive than alpha-amylase, it was quickly inactivated at 60 degrees C. Km values were 12.67 mg/ml for soluble starch and 0.72 mM for maltose. The molecular weight was calculated to be 155,000 +/- 3,000. Glucoamylase released only glucose from both soluble starch and pullulan. S. alluvius is one of the very few yeasts to possess both alpha-amylase and glucoamylase as well as some fermentative capacity to produce ethanol.  相似文献   

15.
Polyurethane foam and nylon-web carriers were compared for simultaneous production of endo-1, 4-β-glucanase and xylanase by immobilizedTrichoderma reesei on a medium based on lactose (27 g/l), cellulose (3 g/l) and sorbose (0.3 g/l). Nylon sheet with 1.2 cm2 carrier surface/ml medium was superior to the others, and it was selected for further studies. The carbon source had a marked effect on enzyme production by the immobilized fungus. With pure cellulose (10 g/l) as substrate, the maximum endoglucanase activity was 690 nkat/ml and xylanase activity 4800 nkat/ml. Supplementation with 0.5 g/l of sorbose resulted in an increase in both endoglucanase and xylanase activities in all media studied. A more detailed study on the effect of sorbose on a lactose(7 g/l)-and cellulose(3 g/l)-based medium revealed a clear optimum sorbose concentration of 1.5 g/l, with a maximum endoglucanase activity of 660 nkat/ml, xylanase activity of 3670 nkat/ml, and filter-paper activity (overall cellulolytic activity) of 2.0 filter-paper units/ml. However, the addition of 1.5 g/l sorbose to the pure-cellulose(10 g/l)-based medium resulted in a slight decrease in the enzyme production.  相似文献   

16.
The gut anaerobic fungi,Neocallimastix hurleyensis and aOrpinomyces sp., were grown in 100 mL batch and continuous-flow cultures on wheat straw at a concentration of 80 g dry matter/L of culture liquid. In batch cultures,N. hurleyensis and Orpinomyces sp. degraded only ca. 9% and 5% of the wheat straw, respectively. In continuous-flow cultures, however, the two fungi degraded 52-56% of the apparent dry matter of wheat straw. Both fungi were able to produce greater quantities (up to x 30) of cell-wall degrading enzymes (CMCase, xylanase, beta-glucosidase and beta-xylosidase) in continuous-flow cultures than in the corresponding batch cultures. Increasing the dilution rate in continuous-flow culture resulted in the production of increased enzyme activity for all the measured cell-wall degrading enzymes, with proportional relationships between dilution rate and the cumulative activities of beta-glucosidase and beta-xylosidase. Dilution rates, however, had no consistent effect on the cumulative production of the fermentation end-products, acetate, formate, D- and L-lactate from both fungi. In addition to acetate and formate,N. hurleyens is produced D- and L-lactate in both batch and continuous-flow cultures, whereas only trace amounts of L-lactate were detected in the Orpinomyces sp. cultures.  相似文献   

17.
The activities of cellulolytic and xylanolytic enzymes produced by an anaerobic fungus (R1) which resembled Neocallimastix sp. were investigated. Carboxymethylcellulase (CMCase), cellobiase, and filter paper (FPase) activities had pH optima of 6.0, 5.5, and 6.0, respectively. CMCase and cellobiase activities both had a temperature optimum of 50 degrees C, whereas FPase had an optimum of 45 degrees C. The pH and temperature optima for xylanase activity were pH 6.0 and 50 degrees C, respectively. Growth of the fungus on wheat straw, wheat straw holocellulose, or cellulose resulted in substantial colonization, with at least 43 to 58% losses in substrate dry matter and accumulation of comparable amounts of formate. This end product was correlated to apparent loss of substrate dry weight and could be used as an indicator of fungal growth. Milling of wheat straw did not enhance the rate or extent of substrate degradation. Growth of the R1 isolate on the above substrates or xylan also resulted in accumulation of high levels of xylanase activity and lower cellulase activities. Of the cellulases, CMCase was the most active and was associated with either low or trace amounts of cellobiase and FPase activities. During growth on xylan, reducing sugars, including arabinose and xylose, rapidly accumulated in the medium. Xylose and other reducing sugars, but not arabinose, were subsequently used for growth. Reducing sugars also accumulated, but not as rapidly, when the fungus was grown on wheat straw, wheat straw holocellulose, or cellulose. Xylanase activities detected during growth of R1 on media containing glucose, xylose, or cellobiose suggested that enzyme production was constitutive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Eighty-three isolates from different soil samples exhibited the potential for producing active extracellular phytase. The most active fungal isolate with phytase activity was identified as Penicillium simplicissimum. In shaking culture with enrichment medium, the highest extracellular phytase activity of the producing strain was 3.8 U/mL. The crude enzyme filtrate was purified to homogeneity using ultrafiltration. IEC and gel filtration chromatography. The molar mass of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 65 kDa on SDS-PAGE. The saccharide identification with periodic acid-Schiff reagent (PAS) and activity recognition by 1-naphthyl phosphate was all positive. The isoelectric point of the enzyme, as deduced by isoelectric focusing, was pH 5.8, the optimum pH and temperature being pH 4.0 and 55 degrees C, respectively. The purified enzyme revealed broad substrate specificity and was strongly inhibited by Fe2+, Fe3+ and Zn2+; however, no inhibition was found by EDTA and PMSF. Phytase activity was inhibited when 2 mmol/L of dodecasodium phytate was added and the Km for it was determined to be 813 mmol/L.  相似文献   

19.
The activities of cellulolytic and xylanolytic enzymes produced by an anaerobic fungus (R1) which resembled Neocallimastix sp. were investigated. Carboxymethylcellulase (CMCase), cellobiase, and filter paper (FPase) activities had pH optima of 6.0, 5.5, and 6.0, respectively. CMCase and cellobiase activities both had a temperature optimum of 50 degrees C, whereas FPase had an optimum of 45 degrees C. The pH and temperature optima for xylanase activity were pH 6.0 and 50 degrees C, respectively. Growth of the fungus on wheat straw, wheat straw holocellulose, or cellulose resulted in substantial colonization, with at least 43 to 58% losses in substrate dry matter and accumulation of comparable amounts of formate. This end product was correlated to apparent loss of substrate dry weight and could be used as an indicator of fungal growth. Milling of wheat straw did not enhance the rate or extent of substrate degradation. Growth of the R1 isolate on the above substrates or xylan also resulted in accumulation of high levels of xylanase activity and lower cellulase activities. Of the cellulases, CMCase was the most active and was associated with either low or trace amounts of cellobiase and FPase activities. During growth on xylan, reducing sugars, including arabinose and xylose, rapidly accumulated in the medium. Xylose and other reducing sugars, but not arabinose, were subsequently used for growth. Reducing sugars also accumulated, but not as rapidly, when the fungus was grown on wheat straw, wheat straw holocellulose, or cellulose. Xylanase activities detected during growth of R1 on media containing glucose, xylose, or cellobiose suggested that enzyme production was constitutive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The growth and production pattern of phytase by a filamentous fungus, Aspergillus niger van Teighem, were studied in submerged culture at varying agitation rates and controlled and uncontrolled pH conditions. Allowing the initial culture to grow under neutral condition with subsequent decline in pH resulted in increased phytase productivity. A maximum of 141 nkat/mL phytase was obtained when the broth pH was maintained at pH 2.5 as compared to 17 nkat/mL units at controlled pH 5.5. The culture morphology and rheological properties of the fermentation broth significantly varied with the agitation rate. The volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient was determined at different phases of fungal growth during batch fermentation using static gassing out and dynamic gassing out methods. The oxygen transfer coefficient (k(L)a) of the fermenter was found to be 125 h(-)(1) at 500 rpm as compared to 38 h(-)(1) at 200 rpm. The oxygen transfer rates at different phases of growth were significantly affected by cell mass concentration and fungal morphology. During the course of fermentation there was a gradual decline of k(L)a from 97 h(-)(1) on day 2 to 63 h(-)(1) on day 6 of fermentation, after which no significant change was observed. The degree of agitation considerably influenced the culture morphology where shear thinning of filamentous fungus was observed with the increase in agitation.  相似文献   

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