A specific short dextrin-hydrolyzing extracellular glucosidase from the thermophilic fungus Thermoascus aurantiacus 179-5


Autoria(s): Azevedo Carvalho, Ana Flávia; Zorzetto Gonçalves, Aline; Da Silva, Roberto; Gomes, Eleni
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

27/05/2014

27/05/2014

13/12/2006

Resumo

The thermophilic fungus Thermoascus aurantiacus 179-5 produced large quantities of a glucosidase which preferentially hydrolyzed maltose over starch. Enzyme production was high in submerged fermentation, with a maximal activity of 30 U/ml after 336 h of fermentation. In solid-state fermentation, the activity of the enzyme was 22 U/ml at 144 h in medium containing wheat bran and 5.8 U/ml at 48 h when cassava pulp was used as the culture medium. The enzyme was specific for maltose, very slowly hydrolyzed starch, dextrins (2-7G) and the synthetic substrate (α-PNPG), and did not hydrolyze sucrose. These properties suggest that the enzyme is a type II α-glucosidase. The optimum temperature of the enzyme was 70°C. In addition, the enzyme was highly thermostable (100% stability for 10 h at 60°C and a half-life of 15 min at 80°C), and stable within a wide pH range. Copyright © 2006, The Microbiological Society of Korea.

Formato

276-283

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16820757

Journal of Microbiology, v. 44, n. 3, p. 276-283, 2006.

1225-8873

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/69425

WOS:000238780500004

2-s2.0-33747823854

2-s2.0-33747823854.pdf

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

Journal of Microbiology

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Glucosidase #Solid-state fermentation #Submerged fermentation #Thermoascus #Thermophilic #Thermostable #Fungi #Manihot esculenta #Thermoascus aurantiacus #Triticum aestivum #dextrin #glucosidase #culture medium #enzyme specificity #enzyme stability #enzymology #Eurotiales #fermentation #growth, development and aging #heat #hydrolysis #metabolism #pH #Culture Media #Dextrins #Enzyme Stability #Fermentation #Glucosidases #Heat #Hydrogen-Ion Concentration #Hydrolysis #Substrate Specificity
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article