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1.
The effect of polymeric substances such as alpha-cellulose, birchwood xylan, corn hull, and sugarcane bagasse, and of soluble sugars such as L-arabinose, D-galactose, D-glucose, D-xylose, and cellobiose, on the induction of multienzyme complexes in a facultatively anaerobic bacterium, Paenibacillus curdlanolyticus B-6, was investigated under aerobic conditions. Cells and culture supernatants of strain B-6 grown on different carbon sources were analyzed. Cells grown on each carbon source adhered to cellulose. Hence strain B-6 cells from all carbon sources must have an essential component responsible for anchoring the cells to the substrate surfaces. Native-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (native-PAGE), sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), zymogram analysis, and enzymatic assays indicated that many proteins having xylanolytic and cellulolytic activities from P. curdlanolyticus B-6 grown on each carbon source were produced as two multienzyme complexes in the culture supernatants. These results indicate that P. curdlanolyticus B-6 produced multienzyme complexes when grown on both polymeric and soluble sugars. The multienzyme complexes of P. curdlanolyticus B-6 consisted of the main enzymes and non-enzymatic subunits and the production of some different subunits, depending on the carbon source.  相似文献   

2.
A group I Bacillus strain, DLG, was isolated and characterized as being most closely related to Bacillus subtilis. When grown on any of a variety of sugars, the culture supernatant of this isolate was found to possess cellulolytic activity, as demonstrated by degradation of trinitrophenyl-carboxymethyl cellulose. Growth in medium containing cellobiose or glucose resulted in the greatest production of cellulolytic activity. The cellulolytic activity was not produced until the stationary phase of growth, and the addition of glucose or cellobiose to a culture in this phase had no apparent effect on enzyme production. Fractionation of the culture supernatant showed that the molecular weight of the enzymatic activity was less than 100,000. Maximum cellulolytic activity in assays was observed at pH 4.8 and at 58C, although maximum thermal stability of the activity. Kinetic experiments suggested that more than one enzyme was acting upon trinitrophenyl-carboxymethyl cellulose. Exocellular protein produced by this Bacillus isolate showed roughly one-fifth the cellulolytic activity displayed by Trichoderma reesei C30 on noncrystalline, cellulosic substrates. In contrast to T. reesei cellulase, the Bacillus enzymatic activity showed no ability to degrade crystalline forms of cellulose, nor was cellobiase activity detectable.  相似文献   

3.
A group I Bacillus strain, DLG, was isolated and characterized as being most closely related to Bacillus subtilis. When grown on any of a variety of sugars, the culture supernatant of this isolate was found to possess cellulolytic activity, as demonstrated by degradation of trinitrophenyl-carboxymethyl cellulose. Growth in medium containing cellobiose or glucose resulted in the greatest production of cellulolytic activity. The cellulolytic activity was not produced until the stationary phase of growth, and the addition of glucose or cellobiose to a culture in this phase had no apparent effect on enzyme production. Fractionation of the culture supernatant showed that the molecular weight of the enzymatic activity was less than 100,000. Maximum cellulolytic activity in assays was observed at pH 4.8 and at 58C, although maximum thermal stability of the activity. Kinetic experiments suggested that more than one enzyme was acting upon trinitrophenyl-carboxymethyl cellulose. Exocellular protein produced by this Bacillus isolate showed roughly one-fifth the cellulolytic activity displayed by Trichoderma reesei C30 on noncrystalline, cellulosic substrates. In contrast to T. reesei cellulase, the Bacillus enzymatic activity showed no ability to degrade crystalline forms of cellulose, nor was cellobiase activity detectable.  相似文献   

4.
Culture filtrates of Mucor pusillus NRRL 2543 contained hydrolytic enzymes that attacked native cellulose, acid-swollen cellulose, carboxymethylcellulose, and cellobiose. The distribution profiles of cellulolytic and beta-glucosidase activities after gel filtration on Sephadex G-75 showed the presence of several active peaks. Glucose was the only product of hydrolysis when native cellulose was used as the substrate. Acid-swollen cellulose, when treated with cellulase free of beta-glucosidase activity, gave rise to glucose, cellobiose, and at least two higher molecular weight components which were also hydrolyzed in turn to cellobiose and glucose. The presence of a multiple cellulolytic enzyme system was indicated, the components of which may have specific roles in the degradation of cellulose.  相似文献   

5.
Examination by scanning electron microscopy and incubation on potato-dextrose agar medium showed that dry seeds ofRetama raetam were externally free of fungi. When planted in sandy loam soil, the seeds become colonized with eleven soil-borne fungal species. The fungi were isolated on cellulose agar, pectin agar and lignin agar media.Aspergillus flavus, A. niger, A. fumigatus, Penicillium capsolatum andFusarium oxysporum had broad occurrence and were recovered on all the three media. The production of hydrolytic enzymes by the isolated fungi depends on the substrate and species.Penicillium capsolatum, P. spinulosum andA. niger had wide enzymatic amplitude and they were able to produce cellulolytic, pectolytic and lignolytic activities on corresponding substrates as well as on seed-coat-containing media. The lignolytic activities of the isolated species exceptChaetomium bostrychodes andTrichoderma viride were enhanced by applying the seed-coat materials as C- source rather than lignin. SoakingR. raetam seeds in culture filtrates of most of the fungi grown on seed-coat-supplemented media induced a pronounced and distinct stimulating effect on seed germination. The most effective filtrates were those ofP. capsolatum, P. spinulosum andSporotrichum pulverulentum.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The mode of action of the cellulolytic enzymes of two strong cellulose decomposing fungi, Penicillium oxalicum Curie et Thom and Helminthosporium cyclops Drechsler, was studied. The culture filtrates and enzyme preparations obtained from them showed high cellulase activity and very weak cellobiase activity. The cellulolytic system of both experimental organisms seems to be multicomponent. The cellulase component showed its activity mainly extracellulary and the cellobiase component, mainly intracellulary. It seems, therefore, that during growth of both fungi on a cellulose medium, the extracellular cellulase acts hydrolytically on the cellulose substrate forming cellobiose which is further acted upon by intracellular cellobiase to form glucose. Paper chromatographic assay of the products of the enzymatic reaction sub-stantiated this conclusion.  相似文献   

7.
About 70 strains of white and brown rot fungi were cultivated on media, containing filter paper cellulose as the main carbon source. The cellulolytic activity of the culture filtrates was measured after different periods of growth by means of the turbidimetric method. The results obtained indicate a difference between the two types of wood decay fungi as to the capacity of attacking the cellulose used in the medium and in the cellulase test. No significant C1activity was found in any of the brown rot cultures whereas all white rot fungi tested exerted a measurable activity on the test substrate. The effect of various carbohydrates and some proteins as inducers of cellulase activity was studied. Especially cellobiose and lactose were active on white rot fungi in this respect, particularly in the presence of yeast extract. Also some brown rot fungi exerted C1-activity after incubation on glucose or cellobiose.  相似文献   

8.
Cellulase production by Trichoderma harzianum E58 grown on lactose and various cellulosic substrates such as Solka Floe, Avicel, and steamed aspenwood was investigated. The culture filtrates of T. harzianum E58 obtained after growth on these substrates were assayed for their cellulase activities and overall hydrolytic activities. The severity of the steaming conditions used for the aspenwood had a pronounced effect on the cellulolytic activity of the produced culture filtrates. Those substrates that were more readily hydrolyzed by the cellulase complex were the poorest substrates for inducing an active cellulase complex. Substrates such as acid-impregnated aspenwood and lactose induced a less hydrolytic efficient cellulase complex than more recalcitrant substrates such as microcrystalline cellulose.  相似文献   

9.
Summary An active cellulolytic culture was obtained following growth of the Cellulomonas strain CS1-17 for 24 h at 32° C on 1 or 2% alkali pretreated sugar cane bagasse. Environmental conditions were then varied to favour reducing sugar accumulation from fresh alkali pretreated bagasse added to the 24 h culture medium at 75 g/l. After incubation for an additional 48 h at 37° C under anaerobic, aerobic and aerobic+0.2% sodium azide conditions, reducing sugar was accumulated at 22.8, 23.7 and 25.6 g/l respectively. Approximately 83% of this release occurred during the first 18 h of incubation and the reducing sugar released contained approximately 14% xylose, 35% glucose, and 26% cellobiose. Addition of exogenous cellobiase resulted in conversion of the cellobiose to glucose.  相似文献   

10.
When the wild type Cellulomonas flavigena was grown on glycerol, xylose or cellobiose, it produced basal levels of carboxymethyl-cellulase (CMCase), filter-paperase (FPase) and xylanase activities. By comparison, a catabolic derepressed mutant strain of the same organism produced markedly higher levels of these enzymes when grown on the same carbon sources. Sugar-cane bagasse induced both the wild type and the mutant strain to produce three- to eight-time higher levels of FPase and xylanase than was observed with xylose or cellobiose. Continuous culture was used to determine the minimal cellobiose or glucose concentrations that repress the enzyme synthesis in both strains. 2.5 g l(-1) glucose repressed FPase and xylanases from wild type, while 1.6 times more glucose was needed to repress the same activities in the PN-120 strain. In the same way, twofold more cellobiose was needed to reduce by 75% the CMCase and xylanase activities in the mutant compared to the wild type. The FPase in the presence of 4 g l(-1) cellobiose did not change in the same strain. Therefore, its derepressed and feedback resistant characters of PN-120 mutant are evident. On the other hand, isoelectrofocused crude extracts of mutant and wild strains induced by sugar-cane bagasse, did not show differences in protein patterns, however, the Schiffs staining was more intense in the PN-120 than in the wild strain. These results point out that the mutational treatment did not apparently change the extracellular proteins from mutant PN-120 and this could affect their regulation sites, since derepressed and feed-back resistant enzymes may be produced.  相似文献   

11.
Sporotrichum thermophile Apinis, was the most active carboxymethyl-cellulose (CMC)-ase producer among seven thermophilic and four thermotolerant fungal species isolated from Egyptian soil and screened for their ability to produce extracellular cellulase in culture media containing CMC as a sole carbon source. The fungus also efficiently hydrolysed filter paper cellulose. Comparison of various untreated and alkali-treated cellulosic and lignocellulosic materials as substrates for cellulase production by S. thermophile revealed the most easily degraded substrate was sugarcane bagasse at 2% concentration. This substrate when alkali treated was the most susceptible to enzymic hydrolysis by culture filtrates of S. thermophile grown on untreated bagasse. Optimum hydrolysis was obtained after 18 h incubation with the filtrate at pH 3·5–4 and 45°C. Alkali treatment of bagasse reduced its lignin content significantly and the culture filtrate of S. thermophile grown on untreated bagasse was found to contain xylanase and polygalacturonase in addition to cellulase and cellobiase.  相似文献   

12.
The enhancement of enzyme complex produced by Penicillium echinulatum grown in several culture media components (bagasse sugarcane pretreated by various methods, soybean meal, wheat bran, sucrose, and yeast extract) was studied to increment FPase, xylanase, pectinase, and β-glucosidase enzyme activities. The present results indicated that culture media composed with 10 g/L of the various bagasse pretreatment methods did not have any substantial influence with respect to the FPase, xylanase, and β-glucosidase attained maximum values of, respectively, 2.68 FPU/mL, 2.04, and 115.4 IU/mL. On the other hand, proposed culture media to enhance β-glucosidase production composed of 10 g/L steam-exploded bagasse supplemented with soybean flour 5.0 g/L, yeast extract 1.0 g/L, and sucrose 10.0 g/L attained, respectively, 3.19 FPU/mL and 3.06 IU/mL while xylanase was maintained at the same level. The proteomes obtained from the optimized culture media for enhanced FPase, xylanase, pectinase, and β-glucosidase production were analyzed using mass spectrometry and a panel of GH enzyme activities against 16 different substrates. Culture medium designed to enhance β-glucosidase activity achieved higher enzymatic activities values (13 measured activities), compared to the culture media for FPase/pectinase (9 measured activities) and xylanase (7 measured activities), when tested against the 16 substrates. Mass spectrometry analyses of secretome showed a consistent result and the greatest number of spectral counts of Cazy family enzymes was found in designed β-glucosidase culture medium, followed by FPase/pectinase and xylanase. Most of the Cazy identified protein was cellobiohydrolase (GH6 and GH7), endoglucanase (GH5), and endo-1,4-β-xylanase (GH10). Enzymatic hydrolysis of hydrothermally pretreated sugarcane bagasse performed with β-glucosidase enhanced cocktail achieved 51.4 % glucose yield with 10 % w/v insoluble solids at enzyme load of 15 FPU/g material. Collectively the results demonstrated that it was possible to rationally modulate the GH activity of the enzymatic complex secreted by P. echinulatum using adjustment of the culture medium composition. The proposed strategy may contribute to increase enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocellulosic materials.  相似文献   

13.
Derepressed mutant PR-22 was obtained by N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) mutagenic treatment of Cellulomonas flavigena PN-120. This mutant improved its xylanolytic activity from 26.9 to 40 U mg−1 and cellulolytic activity from 1.9 to 4 U mg−1; this represented rates almost 2 and 1.5 times higher, respectively, compared to its parent strain growing in sugarcane bagasse. Either glucose or cellobiose was added to cultures of C. flavigena PN-120 and mutant PR-22 induced with sugarcane bagasse in batch culture. The inhibitory effect of glucose on xylanase activity was more noticeable for parent strain PN-120 than for mutant PR-22. When 20 mM glucose was added, the xylanolytic activity decreased 41% compared to the culture grown without glucose in mutant PR-22, whereas in the PN-120 strain the xylanolytic activity decreased by 49% at the same conditions compared to its own control. Addition of 10 and 15 mM of glucose did not adversely affect CMCase activity in PR-22, but glucose at 20 mM inhibited the enzymatic activity by 28%. The CMCase activity of the PN-120 strain was more sensitive to glucose than PR-22, with a reduction of CMCase activity in the range of 20–32%. Cellobiose had a more significant effect on xylanase and CMCase activities than glucose did in the mutant PR-22 and parent strain. Nevertheless, the activities under both conditions were always higher in the mutant PR-22 than in the PN-120 strain. Enzymatic saccharification experiments showed that it is possible to accumulate up to 10 g l−1 of total soluble sugars from pretreated sugarcane bagasse with the concentrated enzymatic crude extract from mutant PR-22.  相似文献   

14.
Cellulase (CMCase) and xylanase enzyme production and saccharification of sugar cane bagasse were coupled into two stages and named enzyme production and sugar cane bagasse saccharification. The performance of Cellulomonas flavigena (Cf) PR‐22 cultured in a bubble column reactor (BCR) was compared to that in a stirred tank reactor (STR). Cells cultured in the BCR presented higher yields and productivity of both CMCase and xylanase activities than those grown in the STR configuration. A continuous culture with Cf PR‐22 was run in the BCR using 1% alkali‐pretreated sugar cane bagasse and mineral media, at dilution rates ranging from 0.04 to 0.22 1/h. The highest enzymatic productivity values were found at 0.08 1/h with 1846.4 ± 126.4 and 101.6 ± 5.6 U/L·h for xylanase and CMCase, respectively. Effluent from the BCR in steady state was transferred to an enzymatic reactor operated in fed‐batch mode with an initial load of 75 g of pretreated sugar cane bagasse; saccharification was then performed in an STR at 55°C and 300 rpm for 90 h. The constant addition of fresh enzyme as well as the increase in time of contact with the substrate increased the total soluble sugar concentration 83% compared to the value obtained in a batch enzymatic reactor. This advantageous strategy may be used for industrial enzyme pretreatment and saccharification of lignocellulosic wastes to be used in bioethanol and chemicals production from lignocellulose. © 2016 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 32:321–326, 2016  相似文献   

15.
Zymomonas mobilis and a mesophilic cellulolytic clostridium (strain C7) were grown in coculture in a medium containing cellulose as fermentable substrate. The coculture was stable through at least ten serial transfers and produced markedly higher amounts of ethanol than monocultures of the cellulolytic clostridium. Glucose and cellobiose, derived from the breakdown of cellulose, accumulated in strain C7 monocultures, but not in cocultures. The molar ratio of ethanol to acetate was higher in cocultures than in monocultures of strain C7. The cellulolytic clostridium was relatively ethanol-tolerant, inasmuch as it grew and fermented cellulose in media containing up to 7 g of ethanol/100 ml. Cellulase (Avicelase) activity of strain C7 was inhibited by cellobiose, but not by glucose.  相似文献   

16.
Cellobiase (beta-D-glucosidase) with a molecular weight of 100 kDa and pI 5.2 was isolated from the cellulolytic system of Penicillium verruculosum. Kinetic parameters of enzymatic hydrolysis of cellobiose, gentiobiose, sophorose, and synthetic substrates, i.e. methylumbelliferyl and p-nitrophenyl sugar derivatives were determined. Glucose and D-glucose-delta-lactone competitively inhibited cellobiase (Ki = 0.19 mM and 17 microM, respectively). Glucosyl transfer reactions were studied with cellobiose as a single substrate and in the mixture of cellobiose and methylumbelliferyl cellobioside. The product composition was determined in these systems. The ratio of hydrolysis and transfer reaction rates for cellobiose conversion was calculated.  相似文献   

17.
A schematic representation of the variety of products which can be obtained by microbial conversion of cellulose is presented. Alkaline pre-treatment has been used after milling in all the experiments. Solka-floc or sugarcane bagasse was used as sources of cellulose. A cellulolytic strain of Aspergillus terreus (ATCC 30514) was cultivated in batch-, fed batch and continuous culture up to 7 liter stirred tank fermenter. The general growth characteristics were determined by growing on glucose. Results of experiments on the growth of A. terreus for production of biomass on Solka-floc or Sugarcane bagasse are given, also the ability of crude cellulases to produce sugar syrups by enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose has been evaluated.  相似文献   

18.
V. A. Adisa 《Mycopathologia》1985,91(2):101-108
The production of amylolytic, cellulolytic and pectinolytic enzymes by Aspergillus flavus and A. fumigatus was investigated. The two fungi were cultured on wheat offal and liquid crystalline carboxymethylcellulose media. A. flavus produced amylases on basal and starch containing media while A. fumigatus could only produce amylases on starch medium. The cellulolytic activities of filtrates from culture or infected fruits showed that A. flavus produced lesser quantities of cellulolytic enzymes than A. fumigatus. At 25 °C and at a pH range of 6–8, A. flavus best produces amylases and cellulases, while A. fumigatus showed highest activities of the two enzymes at 35–40 °C and at pH 7.0. Two pectinolytic enzymes — polymethylgalacturonase and pectinmethyltrans-eliminase — were identified in vivo with the two molds. An endopolygalacturonase in addition to these two pectinolytic enzymes was well associated with A. fumigatus.  相似文献   

19.
Saccharum officinarum bagasse (common name: sugarcane bagasse) and Pennisetum purpureum (also known as Napier grass) are among the most promising feedstocks for bioethanol production in Argentina and Brazil. In this study, both biomasses were assessed before and after acid pretreatment and following hydrolysis with Nasutitermes aquilinus and Cortaritermes fulviceps termite gut digestome. The chemical composition analysis of the biomasses after diluted acid pretreatment showed that the hemicellulose fraction was partially removed. The (hemi) cellulolytic activities were evaluated in bacterial culture supernatants of termite gut homogenates grown in treated and untreated biomasses. In all cases, we detected significantly higher endoglucanase and xylanase activities using pretreated biomasses compared to untreated biomasses, carboxymethylcellulose and xylan. Several protein bands with (hemi) cellulolytic activity were detected in zymograms and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Some proteins of these bands or spots were identified as xylanolytic peptides by mass spectrometry. Finally, the diversity of cultured cellulolytic bacterial endosymbionts associated to both Argentinean native termite species was analyzed. This study describes, for the first time, bacterial endosymbionts and endogenous (hemi) cellulases of two Argentinean native termites as well as their potential application in degradation of lignocellulosic biomass for bioethanol production.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Paecilomyces inflatus isolated from municipal waste compost was found to have cellulolytic activity in several solid and liquid media. This study was done to reveal the multifarious effects of municipal waste compost on endoglucanase activity of P. inflatus. The highest enzyme activities under the conditions of solid-state fermentation were measured in authentic compost samples compared with wood, straw and bran substrates. In surface liquid cultures glucose, cellobiose, xylan, Avicel cellulose, carboxymethylcellulose (CM-cellulose), starch and citrus pectin were used as carbon sources. All carbon sources supported the growth of P. inflatus. However, only CM-cellulose, cellobiose and pectin noticeably stimulated endoglucanase (EG) activity. Further stimulation of EG activity was obtained in cultures containing 1% CM-cellulose as a carbon source by supplementation with low-molecular mass aromatic compounds vanillin, veratric acid and benzoic acid, and with soil humic acid (SHA). SHA and veratric acid were found to be the most efficient elicitors of the cellulolytic activity. P. inflatus was able to utilize nitrate and ammonium as pure nitrogen sources in media containing cellulose.  相似文献   

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