Alkaline protease from a non-toxigenic mangrove isolate of Vibrio sp. V26 with potential application in animal cell culture


Autoria(s): Bright Singh, I S; Saramma, A V; Jayesh, P; Manjusha, K; Prem, Gopinath; Priyaja, P; Divya, Jose; Sreelakshmi, B
Data(s)

17/07/2014

17/07/2014

21/06/2012

Resumo

Vibrio sp. V26 isolated from mangrove sediment showed 98 % similarity to 16S rRNA gene of Vibrio cholerae, V. mimicus, V. albensis and uncultured clones of Vibrio. Phenotypically also it resembled both V. cholerae and V. mimicus.Serogrouping, virulence associated gene profiling, hydrophobicity, and adherence pattern clearly pointed towards the non—toxigenic nature of Vibrio sp. V26. Purification and characterization of the enzyme revealed that it was moderately thermoactive, nonhemagglutinating alkaline metalloprotease with a molecular mass of 32 kDa. The application of alkaline protease from Vibrio sp. V26 (APV26) in sub culturing cell lines (HEp-2, HeLa and RTG-2) and dissociation of animal tissue (chick embryo) for primary cell culture were investigated. The time required for dissociation of cells as well as the viable cell yield obtained by while administeringAPV26 and trypsin were compared. Investigations revealed that the alkaline protease of Vibrio sp. V26 has the potential to be used in animal cell culture for subculturing cell lines and dissociation of animal tissue for the development of primary cell cultures, which has not been reported earlier among metalloproteases of Vibrios.

Cytotechnology (2013) 65:199–212 DOI 10.1007/s10616-012-9472-z

Cochin University of Science and Technology

Identificador

http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/4080

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Springer

Palavras-Chave #Alkaline protease #Vibrio sp. #Animal cell culture #Primary cell culture #Virulence genes #Trypsin
Tipo

Article