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1.
A newly isolated bacterial strain, Bacillus sp. MX47, was actively producing extracellular xylanase only in xylan-containing medium. The xylanase was purified from the culture broth by two chromatographic steps. The xylanase had an apparent molecular weight of 26.4?kDa with an NH2-terminal sequence (Gln-Gly-Gly-Asn-Phe) distinct from that of reported proteins, implying it is a novel enzyme. The optimum pH and temperature for xylanase activity were 8.0 and 40?°C, respectively. The enzyme activity was severely inhibited by many divalent metal ions and EDTA at 5?mM. The xylanase was highly specific to beechwood and oat spelt xylan, however, not active on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), avicel, pectin, and starch. Analysis of the xylan hydrolysis products by Bacillus sp. MX47 xylanase indicated that it is an endo-??-1,4-xylanase. It hydrolyzed xylan to xylobiose as the end product. The K m and V max values toward beechwood xylan were 3.24?mg?ml?1 and 58.21???mol?min?1?mg?1 protein, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
An extracellular xylanase from halophilic Streptomonospora sp. YIM 90494 was purified to homogeneity from a fermentation broth by ammonium sulphate precipitation, gel filtration chromatography and ion exchange chromatography. The purified xylanase appeared as a single protein band on SDS-PAGE with a molecular mass of approximately 50 kDa. The xylanase had maximum activity at pH 7.5 and 55 °C. The enzyme was stable over a broad pH range (pH 4.0–10.0) and showed good thermal stability when being incubated at 60 °C for 2 h. Kinetic experiments indicated that the enzyme had K m and V max values of 19.24 mg/mL and 6.1 μmol/min/mg, respectively, using birch wood xylan as substrate. The inhibitory effects of various metal ions and chemical agents on the xylanase activity were investigated. It is greatly interesting to note that Ag+ ion and SDS, which strongly inhibited most xylanases reported previously increases the xylanase activity in this study. These characteristics suggest that the enzyme with new properties has considerable potential in industrial applications.  相似文献   

3.
An extracellular xylanase produced by a Mexican Aspergillus strain was purified and characterized. Aspergillus sp. FP-470 was able to grow and produce extracellular xylanases on birchwood xylan, oat spelt xylan, wheat straw, and corncob, with higher production observed on corncob. The strain also produced enzymes with cellulase, amylase, and pectinase activities on this substrate. A 22-kDa endoxylanase was purified 30-fold. Optimum temperature and pH were 60°C and 5.5, respectively, and isoelectric point was 9.0. The enzyme has good stability from pH 5.0 to 10.0 retaining >80% of its original activity within this range. Half-lives of 150 min at 50°C and 6.5 min at 60°C were found. K m and activation energy values were 3.8 mg/mL and 26 kJ/mol, respectively, using birch wood xylan as substrate. The enzyme showed a higher affinity for 4-O-methyl-d-glucuronoxylan with a K m of 1.9 mg/mL. The enzyme displayed no activity toward other polysaccharides, including cellulose. Baking trials were conducted using the crude filtrate and purified enzyme. Addition of both preparations improved bread volume. However, addition of purified endoxylanase caused a 30% increase in volume over the crude extract.  相似文献   

4.
A highly thermostable alkaline xylanase was purified to homogeneity from culture supernatant of Bacillus sp. JB 99 using DEAE-Sepharose and Sephadex G-100 gel filtration with 25.7-fold increase in activity and 43.5% recovery. The molecular weight of the purified xylanase was found to be 20 kDA by SDS-PAGE and zymogram analysis. The enzyme was optimally active at 70 °C, pH 8.0 and stable over pH range of 6.0–10.0.The relative activity at 9.0 and 10.0 were 90% and 85% of that of pH 8.0, respectively. The enzyme showed high thermal stability at 60 °C with 95% of its activity after 5 h. The K m and V max of enzyme for oat spelt xylan were 4.8 mg/ml and 218.6 μM min−1 mg−1, respectively. Analysis of N-terminal amino acid sequence revealed that the xylanase belongs to glycosyl hydrolase family 11 from thermoalkalophilic Bacillus sp. with basic pI. Substrate specificity showed a high activity on xylan-containing substrate and cellulase-free nature. The hydrolyzed product pattern of oat spelt xylan on thin-layer chromatography suggested xylanase as an endoxylanase. Due to these properties, xylanase from Bacillus sp. JB 99 was found to be highly compatible for paper and pulp industry.  相似文献   

5.
A psychrotrophic fungus identified as Trichoderma sp. SC9 produced 36.7 U/ml of xylanase when grown on a medium containing corncob xylan at 20 °C for 6 days. The xylanase was purified 37-fold with a recovery yield of 8.2%. The purified xylanase appeared as a single protein band on SDS-PAGE with a molecular mass of approximately 20.5 kDa. The enzyme had an optimal pH of 6.0, and was stable over pH 3.5–9.0. The optimal temperature of the xylanase was 42.5 °C and it was stable up to 35 °C at pH 6.0 for 30 min. The xylanase was thermolabile with a half-life of 23.9 min at 45 °C. The apparent K m values of the xylanase for birchwood, beechwood, and oat-spelt xylans were found to be 3, 2.1, and 16 mg/ml respectively. The xylanase hydrolyzed beechwood xylan and birchwood xylan to yield mainly xylobiose as end products. The enzyme-hydrolysed xylotriose, xylotetraose, and xylopentose to produce xylobiose, but it hardly hydrolysed xylobiose. A xylanase gene (xynA) with an open reading frame of 669 nucleotide base pairs (bp), encoding 222 amino acids, from the strain was cloned and sequenced. The deduced amino acid sequence of XynA showed 85% homology with Xyn2 from a mesophilic strain of Trichoderma viride.  相似文献   

6.
Dialdehyde starch (DAS) was used as a novel coupling agent to prepare chitosan carrier to immobilize the xylanase from Aspergillus niger A-25. Compared with glutaraldehyde-cross-linked chitosan (CS-GA) and pure chitosan beads, the DAS-cross-linked chitosan (CS-DAS) beads exhibited the highest xylanase activity recovery. The DAS adding amount and cross-linking time in CS-DAS preparation process were optimized with respect to activity recovery to the values of 1.0 g (6.7% w/v concentration) and 16 h, respectively. The optimum temperature of both the CS-DAS- and CS-GA-immobilized xylanase was observed to be 5 °C higher than that of free enzyme (50 °C). The CS-DAS-immobilized xylanase had the highest thermal and storage stability as compared to the CS-GA-immobilized and free xylanase. The apparent K m and V max values of the CS-DAS-immobilized xylanase were estimated to be 1.29 mg/ml and 300.7 μmol/min/mg protein, respectively. The CS-DAS-immobilized xylanase could produce from birchwood xylan high-quality xylo-oligosaccharides, mainly composed of xylotriose, as free xylanase did. The proposed CS-DAS carrier was more advantageous over the CS-GA or pure chitosan carrier for xylanase immobilization application.  相似文献   

7.
An extracellular thermostable xylanase from a newly isolated thermophilic Actinomadura sp. strain Cpt20 was purified and characterized. Based on matrix-assisted laser desorption–ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry analysis, the purified enzyme is a monomer with a molecular mass of 20,110.13 Da. The 19 residue N-terminal sequence of the enzyme showed 84% homology with those of actinomycete endoxylanases. The optimum pH and temperature values for xylanase activity were pH 10 and 80 °C, respectively. This xylanase was stable within a pH range of 5–10 and up to a temperature of 90 °C. It showed high thermostability at 60 °C for 5 days and half-life times at 90 °C and 100 °C were 2 and 1 h, respectively. The xylanase was specific for xylans, showing higher specific activity on soluble oat-spelt xylan followed by beechwood xylan. This enzyme obeyed the Michaelis–Menten kinetics, with the K m and k cat values being 1.55 mg soluble oat-spelt xylan/ml and 388 min−1, respectively. While the xylanase from Actinomadura sp. Cpt20 was activated by Mn2+, Ca2+, and Cu2+, it was, strongly inhibited by Hg2+, Zn2+, and Ba2+. These properties make this enzyme a potential candidate for future use in biotechnological applications particularly in the pulp and paper industry.  相似文献   

8.
An extracellular xylanase produced by a Mexican Aspergillus strain was purified and characterized. Aspergillus sp. FP-470 was able to grow and produce extracellular xylanases on birchwood xylan, oat spelt xylan, wheat straw, and corncob, with higher production observed on corncob. The strain also produced enzymes with cellulase, amylase, and pectinase activities on this substrate. A 22-kDa endoxylanase was purified 30-fold. Optimum temperature and pH were 60 degrees C and 5.5, respectively, and isoelectric point was 9.0. The enzyme has good stability from pH 5.0 to 10.0, retaining >80% of its original activity within this range. Half-lives of 150 min at 50 degrees C and 6.5 min at 60 degrees C were found. K(m) and activation energy values were 3.8 mg/mL and 26 kJ/mol, respectively, using birchwood xylan as substrate. The enzyme showed a higher affinity for 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronoxylan with a K(m) of 1.9 mg/mL. The enzyme displayed no activity toward other polysaccharides, including cellulose. Baking trials were conducted using the crude filtrate and purified enzyme. Addition of both preparations improved bread volume. However, addition of purified endoxylanase caused a 30% increase in volume over the crude extract.  相似文献   

9.
Bacillus circulans D1 is a good producer of extracellular thermostable xylanase. Xylanase production in different carbon sources was evaluated and the enzyme synthesis was induced by various carbon sources. It was found that d-maltose is the best inducer of the enzyme synthesis (7.05 U/mg dry biomass at 48 h), while d-glucose and d-arabinose lead to the production of basal levels of xylanase. The crude enzyme solution is free of cellulases, even when the microorganism was cultivated in a medium with d-cellobiose. When oat spelt xylan was supplemented with d-glucose, the repressive effect of this sugar on xylanase production was observed at 24 h, only when used at 5.0 g/L, leading to a reduction of 60% on the enzyme production. On the other hand, when the xylan medium was supplemented with d-xylose (3.0 or 5.0 g/L), this effect was more evident (80 and 90% of reduction on the enzyme production, respectively). Unlike that observed in the xylan medium, glucose repressed xylanase production in the maltose medium, leading to a reduction of 55% on the enzyme production at 24 h of cultivation. Xylose, at 1.0 g/L, induced xylanase production on the maltose medium. On this medium, the repressive effect of xylose, at 3.0 or 5.0 g/L, was less expressive when compared to its effect on the xylan medium.  相似文献   

10.
This study is related to the isolation of fungal strain for xylanase production using agro-industrial residues. Forty fungal strains with xylanolytic potential were isolated by using xylan agar plates and quantitatively screened in solid-state fermentation. Of all the tested isolates, the strain showing highest ability to produce xylanase was assigned the code Aspergillus niger LCBT-14. For the enhanced production of the enzyme, five different fermentation media were evaluated. Out of all media, M4 containing wheat bran gave maximum enzyme production. Effect of different variables including incubation time, temperature, pH, carbon and nitrogen sources has been investigated. The optimum enzyme production was obtained after 72 h at 30°C and pH 4. Glucose as a carbon source while ammonium sulphate and yeast extract as nitrogen sources gave maximum xylanase production (946 U/mL/min). This study was successful in producing xylanase by A. niger LCBT-14 economically by utilising cheap indigenous substrate.  相似文献   

11.
A low molecular weight endo-xylanase (EC 3.2.1.8) was purified from an edible mushroom Termitomyces clypeatus grown in submerged medium with oat spelt xylan. Xylanase was purified to apparent homogeneity by ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration chromatography. Its molecular weight was determined by gel filtration chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be 12 kDa. The enzyme was found to be most active at 50°C and pH 5.0, being most stable at pH 6.5. The Km for oat spelt xylan was determined to be 10.4 mg/ml. The specificities of the enzyme was observed to be highly specific towards oat spelt xylan and was inhibited by mercuric chloride (HgCl2), N-bromosuccinimide, and trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N′,N′,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid strongly. The inhibitory action of N-bromosuccinimide on enzyme confirmed the presence of one tryptophan residue in its substrate-binding site. Amino acid analysis for xylanase showed the presence of high amount of hydrophobic serine, glycine, threonine, and alanine residues. The N-terminal sequencing study for the previously purified and characterized 56 kDa xylanolytic amyloglucosidase reveal the presence of 33.30% identity with glucoamylase chain A from Aspergillus awamori. The N-terminal sequence analysis of the present 12 kDa enzyme showed highest similarity (72.22% identity) towards xylanase from Neurospora crassa.  相似文献   

12.
The alkalophilic bacteria Bacillus licheniformis 77-2 produces significant quantities of thermostable cellulase-free xylanases. The crude xylanase was purified to apparent homogeneity by gel filtration (G-75) and ionic exchange chromatography (carboxymethyl sephadex, Q sepharose, and Mono Q), resulting in the isolation of two xylanases. The molecular masses of the enzymes were estimated to be 17 kDa (X-I) and 40 kDa (X-II), as determined by SDS-PAGE. The K m and V max values were 1.8 mg/mL and 7.05 U/mg protein (X-I), and 1.05 mg/mL and 9.1 U/mg protein (X-II). The xylanases demonstrated optimum activity at pH 7.0 and 8.0–10.0 for xylanase X-I and X-II, respectively, and, retained more than 75% of hydrolytic activity up to pH 11.0. The purified enzymes were most active at 70 and 75°C for X-I and X-II, respectively, and, retained more than 90% of hydrolytic activity after 1 h of heating at 50°C and 60°C for X-I and X-II, respectively. The predominant products of xylan hydrolysates indicated that these enzymes were endoxylanases.  相似文献   

13.
Sugar cane bagasse consists of hemicellulose (24%) and cellulose (38%), and bioconversion of both fractions to ethanol should be considered for a viable process. We have evaluated the hydrolysis of pretreated bagasse with combinations of cellulase, β-glucosidase, and hemicellulase. Ground bagasse was pretreated either by the AFEX process (2NH3: 1 biomass, 100 °C, 30 min) or with NH4OH (0.5 g NH4OH of a 28% [v/v] per gram dry biomass; 160 °C, 60 min), and composition analysis showed that the glucan and xylan fractions remained largely intact. The enzyme activities of four commercial xylanase preparations and supernatants of four laboratory-grown fungi were determined and evaluated for their ability to boost xylan hydrolysis when added to cellulase and β-glucosidase (10 filter paper units [FPU]: 20 cellobiase units [CBU]/g glucan). At 1% glucan loading, the commercial enzyme preparations (added at 10% or 50% levels of total protein in the enzyme preparations) boosted xylan and glucan hydrolysis in both pretreated bagasse samples. Xylanase addition at 10% protein level also improved hydrolysis of xylan and glucan fractions up to 10% glucan loading (28% solids loading). Significant xylanase activity in enzyme cocktails appears to be required for improving hydrolysis of both glucan and xylan fractions of ammonia pretreated sugar cane bagasse.  相似文献   

14.
An extracellular, endo-??-1,4-xylanase was purified to homogeneity from the culture filtrate of the filamentous fungus Penicillium occitanis Pol6, grown on oat spelt xylan. The purified enzyme (PoXyn2) showed a single band on SDS?CPAGE with an apparent molecular weight of 30?kDa. The xylanase activity was optimal at pH?3.0 and 65?°C. The specific activity measured for oat spelt xylan was 2,368?U?mg?1. The apparent K m and V max values were 8.33?mg?ml?1 and 58.82???mol?min?1?ml?1, respectively, as measured on oat spelt xylan. Thin-layer chromatography experiments revealed that purified PoXyn2 degrades xylan in an endo-fashion releasing xylobiose as main end product. The genomic DNA and cDNA encoding this protein were cloned and sequenced. This PoXyn2 presents an open reading frame of 962?bp, not interrupted by any introns and encoding for a mature protein of 320 amino acids and 29.88?kDa.  相似文献   

15.
A thermostable xylanase from a newly isolated thermophilic fungus Talaromyces thermophilus was purified and characterized. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation, diethylaminoethyl cellulose anion exchange chromatography, P-100 gel filtration, and Mono Q chromatography with a 23-fold increase in specific activity and 17.5% recovery. The molecular weight of the xylanase was estimated to be 25kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel filtration. The enzyme was highly active over a wide range of pH from 4.0 to 10.0. The relative activities at pH5.0, 9.0, and 10.0 were about 80%, 85.0%, and 60% of that at pH7.5, respectively. The optimum temperature of the purified enzyme was 75°C. The enzyme showed high thermal stability at 50°C (7days) and the half-life of the xylanase at 100°C was 60min. The enzyme was free from cellulase activity. K m and V max values at 50°C of the purified enzyme for birchwood xylan were 22.51mg/ml and 1.235μmol min−1 mg−1, respectively. The enzyme was activated by Ag+, Co2+, and Cu2+; on the other hand, Hg2+, Ba2+, and Mn2+ inhibited the enzyme. The present study is among the first works to examine and describe a secreted, cellulase-free, and highly thermostable xylanase from the T. thermophilus fungus whose application as a pre-bleaching aid is of apparent importance for pulp and paper industries.  相似文献   

16.
Xylanase encoding gene (1,224 bp) from Geobacillus thermodenitrificans was cloned in pET28a (+) vector and successfully expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3). The deduced amino acid sequence analysis revealed homology with that of glycosyl hydrolase (GH) 10 family with a high molecular mass (50 kDa). The purified recombinant xylanase is optimally active at pH 9.0 and 70 °C with T 1/2 of 10 min at 80 °C, and retains greater than 85 % activity after exposure to 70 °C for 180 min. The enzyme liberates xylose as well as xylooligosaccharides from birchwood xylan and agro-residues, and therefore, this is an endoxylanase. The xylan hydrolytic products (xylooligosaccharides, xylose, and xylobiose) find application as prebiotics and in the production of bioethanol. The xylanase being thermostable and alkalistable, it has released chromophores and phenolics from the residual lignin of pulps, suggesting its utility in mitigating chlorine requirement in pulp bleaching.  相似文献   

17.
Three pairs of solid substrates from dilute acid pretreatment of two poplar wood samples were enzymatically hydrolyzed by cellulase preparations supplemented with xylanase. Supplementation of xylanase improved cellulose saccharification perhaps due to improved cellulose accessibility by xylan hydrolysis. Total xylan removal directly affected enzymatic cellulose saccharification. Furthermore, xylan removal by pretreatment and xylanase are indifferent to enzymatic cellulose saccharification. However, more enzymatic xylose and glucose yields were obtained for a substrate with lower xylan content after a severer pretreatment at the same xylanase dosage. The effectiveness of xylanase at increased dosages depended on the substrates structure or accessibility. High xylanase dosages were more effective on well pretreated substrates than on under-pretreated substrates with high xylan content. The application sequence of xylanase and cellulase affected cellulose saccharification. This effect varied with substrate accessibility, perhaps due to competition between xylanase and cellulase binding to the substrate.  相似文献   

18.
Xylanase from Bacillus pumilus strain MK001 was immobilized on different matrices following varied immobilization methods. Entrapment using gelatin (GE) (40.0%), physical adsorption on chitin (CH) (35.0%), ionic binding with Q-sepharose (Q-S) (45.0%), and covalent binding with HP-20 beads (42.0%) showed the maximum xylanase immobilization efficiency. The optimum pH of immobilized xylanase shifted up to 1.0 unit (pH 7.0) as compared to free enzyme (pH 6.0). The immobilized xylanase exhibited higher pH stability (up to 28.0%) in the alkaline pH range (7.0–10.0) as compared to free enzyme. Optimum temperature of immobilized xylanase was observed to be 8 °C higher (68.0 °C) than free enzyme (60.0 °C). The free xylanase retained 50.0% activity, whereas xylanase immobilized on HP-20, Q-S, CH, and GE retained 68.0, 64.0, 58.0, and 57.0% residual activity, respectively, after 3 h of incubation at 80.0 °C. The immobilized xylanase registered marginal increase and decrease in K m and V max values, respectively, as compared to free enzyme. The immobilized xylanase retained up to 70.0% of its initial hydrolysis activity after seven enzyme reaction cycles. The immobilized xylanase was found to produce higher levels of high-quality xylo-oligosaccharides from birchwood xylan, indicating its potential in the nutraceutical industry.  相似文献   

19.
Xylans are major hemicellulose components of plant cell wall which can be hydrolyzed by xylanolytic enzymes. Three forms of endo-β-1,4-xylanases (XynSW1, XynSW2A, and XynSW2B) produced by thermotolerant Streptomyces sp. SWU10 have been reported. In the present study, we described the expression and characterization of the fourth xylanase enzyme from this bacteria, termed XynSW3. The gene containing 726 bp was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant enzyme (rXynSW3) was purified from cell-free extract to homogeneity using Ni-affinity column chromatography. The apparent molecular mass of rXynSW3 was 48 kDa. Amino acid sequence analysis revealed that it belonged to a xylanase of glycoside hydrolase family 11. The optimum pH and temperature for enzyme activity were 5.5–6.5 and 50 °C, respectively. The enzyme was stable up to 40 °C and in wide pH ranges (pH 0.6–10.3). Xylan without arabinosyl side chain is the most preferable substrate for the enzyme. By using birch wood xylan as substrate, rXynSW3 produced several oligosaccharides in the initial stage of hydrolysis, and their levels increased with time, demonstrating that the enzyme is an endo-acting enzyme. The major products were xylobiose, triose, and tetraose. The rXynSW3 can be applied in several industries such as food, textile, and biofuel industries, and waste treatment.  相似文献   

20.

A number of wild-type isolates ofSclerotium rolfsii were screened for their capacity to produce lignocellulolytic enzymes when grown on a cellulose-based medium.S. rolfsii proved to be an efficient producer of hemicellulolytic enzymes under the conditions selected for this screening, although there was a great variability in enzyme activities formed by the different isolates. In addition to xylanase and mannanase, which were produced in remarkably high levels, a number of accessory enzymes, which are important for the complete degradation of substituted hemicelluloses and include a-arabinosidase, acetyl esterase, and a-galactosidase, are formed byS. rolfsii. Efficient production of xylanase and mannanase was achieved when cellulose-based media were used for growth. Under these conditions, enhanced levels of endoglucanase were formed as well. Formation of xylanase and mannanase could be more specifically induced when using xylan or mannan as growth substrates, although the enzyme activities thus obtained were significantly lower compared to cultivations on cellulose as main inducing substrate.

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