| Literature DB >> 28330185 |
Naivy Y Nava-Cruz1, Juan C Contreras-Esquivel1, Miguel A Aguilar-González2, Alberto Nuncio1, Raúl Rodríguez-Herrera1, Cristóbal N Aguilar3.
Abstract
Many efforts have been made to produce cellulase with better features and conditions, and filamentous fungi have played an important role in the bioprocess, growing in liquid and solid cultures with sugarcane bagasse, corn stover and others lignocellulosic materials. In the present study, Agave atrovirens fibers were partially characterized, thermal pretreated and used as support, substrate and inducer source for cellulolytic complex production by four strains of the genus Trichoderma, where T. asperellum was selected as the best option for this process after evaluating the enzyme activity and the invasion capacity on the pretreated Agave fibers. Fungi were able to grow on the Agave fibers secreting the complex cellulolytic enzyme. Results show Agave fibers as a good carbon source and support for T. asperellum for the production of the cellulolytic complex (endoglucanase 12,860.8 U/g; exoglucanase 3144.4 U/g; and β-glucosidase 384.4 U/g). These results show the promising potential this material could have in the production of the active enzyme cellulase complex.Entities:
Keywords: Biodegradation; Cellulase; Enzyme activity; Pretreatment; Selection
Year: 2016 PMID: 28330185 PMCID: PMC5398194 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-016-0426-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Partial characterization of the Agave atrovirens fibers
| Treatment | Cellulose (%) | Total sugars (g/l) | Reducing sugars (g/l) | PH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hydrothermal | 23.48 | 0.16 | 0.04 | 5.40 |
| Chemical | 67.12 | 0.73 | 0.07 | 6.56 |
Cellulase production in SSF bioreactors
| Enzyme | Time (h) | Enzymatic activity (U/g) |
|---|---|---|
| Exoglucanase | 240 | 3144.4 ± 87.4 |
| Endoglucanase | 216 | 12,860.8 ± 186.3 |
| β-Glucosidase | 312 | 384.4 ± 26.6 |
Fig. 1Growth analysis of Trichoderma asperellum on Agave atrovirens fibers with a hydrothermal pretreatment
Fig. 2Exoglucanase activity
Fig. 3Endoglucanase activity
Fig. 4β-Glucosidase activity
Fig. 5Qualitative enzyme activity. Carboxymethylcellulose plate dyed with Congo red. a Blank (without fermentation extract). b Sample with fermentation extract in the surface
Fig. 6Total sugars during fermentation with Trichoderma asperellum
Fig. 7Protein content in the fermentation with Trichoderma asperellum
Growth velocity and enzyme activity for the strain selection
| Strains | Growth rate (cm/h) | Exoglucanse (U/g) | Endoglucanase (U/g) | β-Glucosidase (U/g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T2-31 | 0.038* | 606.4 | 1213.2 | 582 |
| T1-04 | 0.04* | 582.8 | 379.2 | 537.6 |
| T2-11 | 0.038* | 340.4 | 254.4 | 157.2 |
| T2 | 0.032* | 192.8 | 58 | 9.2 |
* Data statistically similar
Comparison of cellulase production by Trichoderma asperellum with other fungi under SSF
| Strain | Substrate | Enzyme activity (UI/g) | Endoglucanase | β-Glucosidase | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Wheat bran | 2.2 | 13.1 | 9.2 | Raghuwanshi et al. ( |
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| Wheat bran | 0.74 | 4.10 | – | Pathak et al. ( |
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| Horticultural waste | 15.0 | 90.5 | 61.6 | Xin and Geng ( |
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| Castor bean meal | 953.4 | 191.6 | 88.3 | Nunes et al. ( |
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| Jatropha curcas seed-cake | 3974 | – | – | Ncube et al. ( |
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| Wheat bran | 3.5 | 71.7 | 53.7 | Deswal et al. ( |
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