To investigate the cellulose modification process on kraft pulp during recycling by mono-endoglucanase.
Results
Pichia pastoris expressing endoglucanase, EG1, was grown in a 10 l fermenter yielding a high carboxymethyl cellulase (CMCase) activity of 340 U mg?1. EG1-mediated modification of kraft pulp resulted in a paper sheet with the tensile index and burst index increased by 10 and 6.5 %, respectively. The kink index (indicating abrupt bends in fibres) of the enzyme-treated group decreased sharply by 45 % after the first recycling, compared with a reduction of only 1 % in the control group. Furthermore, EG1 treatment decreased the growth of crystallinity from 73.5 to 73.2 % and crystal size from 7.45 to 7.21 nm, which alleviated paper aging.
Conclusion
Endoglucanase EG1 modifies the interfacial properties of fibers, which affects fibre morphology during the recycling process and improves the technical properties of the resulting pulp and paper.
To improve the stability and sweetness of the sweet-tasting protein, monellin, by using site-directed mutagenesis and a Pichia pastoris expression system with a GAPDH constitutive promoter.
Results
Both wild-type and E2 N mutant of single-chain monellin gene were cloned into the PGAPZαA vector and expressed in Pichia pastoris. The majority of the secreted recombinant protein, at 0.15 g/l supernatant, was monellin. This was purified by Sephadex G50 chromatography. The sweetness threshold of wild-type and E2 N were 30 μg/ml and 20 μg/ml, respectively. Compared with the proteins expressed in Escherichia coli, the thermostability of both proteins was improved. The N-terminal sequence is determinative for the sweetness of the proteins expressed in yeast strains.
Conclusions
Site-directed mutagenesis, modification of the N-terminus of monellin, and without the need of methanol induction in P. pastoris expression system, indicate the possibility for large-scale production of this sweet-tasting protein.
The fungal infection caused by Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) in amphibians is known to be lethal when infection intensity values exceed loads of 10,000 zoospores per individual. We investigated Bd infection intensity in 100 anurans of southern Brazil. Almost half of the individuals were infected and the intensity ranged from four to about 156,000 zoospore genomic equivalents. We found no clinical signs of chytridiomycosis and no evidence of mortality. However, we observed a reduction in the number of infected individuals with loads above 10,000 zoospores. This fact could be considered indirect evidence that individuals with high loads are removed from the population. 相似文献
A young male flower-derived embryogenic suspension cell population of AAA ‘Pei Chiao’, ‘Dwarf Cavendish’, and AAB ‘Raja’ was used for developing an acidogenic growth model
. We hypothesized that a close relationship exists between the self-regulated pH medium and the corresponding changes in the growth phases. Studies have reported that a pH below 4.6 may prevent the embryogenic cells from undergoing polar growth. Controlling pH up to a level 4.6 within 2 days during the changes of pre-embryogenic cells (PECs) and proembryogenic masses into embryogenic determined cells (EDCs) uniformly resulted in unequal cell division. The hydrogen ion buffer 2-N-morpholino-ethanesulfonic acid at 10 g L−1 was added to MA2 and MA3 media, showing the medium pH of MA3 up to 5.0, thus maintaining a relatively stable pH in AAA ‘Pei-Chiao’ and AAB ‘Raja’ cells that autoregulate acidification, significantly increasing the number of somatic embryos. When the proliferation and globularization phases were acidified to pH 3.5 ± 0.2, cells were released to free single cells of PECs and EDCs after 21 days. This study provides possible explanation that PECs deposit callose on their cell walls as a possible protector from strong acidic condition. Regulation at pH 5.0 ± 0.2 resulted the production efficiency achieved was 0.9 million somatic embryos per 1 mL of the settled cell volume.
The α-l-rhamnosidase catalyzes the hydrolytic release of rhamnose from polysaccharides and glycosides and is widely used due to its applications in a variety of industrial processes. Our previous work reported that a wild-type α-l-rhamnosidase (RhaL1) from Alternaria sp. L1 could synthesize rhamnose-containing chemicals (RCCs) though reverse hydrolysis reaction with inexpensive rhamnose as glycosyl donor. To enhance the yield of reverse hydrolysis reaction and to determine the amino acid residues essential for the catalytic activity of RhaL1, site-directed mutagenesis of 11 residues was performed in this study. Through rationally designed mutations, the critical amino acid residues which may form direct or solvent-mediated hydrogen bonds with donor rhamnose (Asp252, Asp257, Asp264, Glu530, Arg548, His553, and Trp555) and may form the hydrophobic pocket in stabilizing donor (Trp261, Tyr302, Tyr316, and Trp369) in active-site of RhaL1 were analyzed, and three positive mutants (W261Y, Y302F, and Y316F) with improved product yield stood out. From the three positive variants, mutant W261Y accelerated the reverse hydrolysis with a prominent increase (43.7 %) in relative yield compared to the wild-type enzyme. Based on the 3D structural modeling, we supposed that the improved yield of mutant W261Y is due to the adjustment of the spatial position of the putative catalytic acid residue Asp257. Mutant W261Y also exhibited a shift in the pH-activity profile in hydrolysis reaction, indicating that introducing of a polar residue in the active site cavity may affect the catalysis behavior of the enzyme. 相似文献