| Literature DB >> 35049963 |
Hamada El-Gendi1, Ahmed K Saleh2, Raied Badierah3,4, Elrashdy M Redwan3,5, Yousra A El-Maradny5, Esmail M El-Fakharany5.
Abstract
Enzymes have played a crucial role in mankind's challenges to use different types of biological systems for a diversity of applications. They are proteins that break down and convert complicated compounds to produce simple products. Fungal enzymes are compatible, efficient, and proper products for many uses in medicinal requests, industrial processing, bioremediation purposes, and agricultural applications. Fungal enzymes have appropriate stability to give manufactured products suitable shelf life, affordable cost, and approved demands. Fungal enzymes have been used from ancient times to today in many industries, including baking, brewing, cheese making, antibiotics production, and commodities manufacturing, such as linen and leather. Furthermore, they also are used in other fields such as paper production, detergent, the textile industry, and in drinks and food technology in products manufacturing ranging from tea and coffee to fruit juice and wine. Recently, fungi have been used for the production of more than 50% of the needed enzymes. Fungi can produce different types of enzymes extracellularly, which gives a great chance for producing in large amounts with low cost and easy viability in purified forms using simple purification methods. In the present review, a comprehensive trial has been advanced to elaborate on the different types and structures of fungal enzymes as well as the current status of the uses of fungal enzymes in various applications.Entities:
Keywords: applications; enzymes; function; fungi; structure and classification
Year: 2021 PMID: 35049963 PMCID: PMC8778853 DOI: 10.3390/jof8010023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
General application of fungal enzymes in different fields.
| Application | Field | Fungal Name | Enzyme Name | Enzyme Use | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Industries | Food and beverage | Reduce the acrylamide formation in potato chips or French fries, bakery products, and coffee by degradation of | [ | ||
|
| Laccases | Dough conditioner | [ | ||
| Xylanases | Improve yield and clarity of pineapple juice | [ | |||
|
| Pectinases | Improve the quantity of the extracted Orange juice | [ | ||
|
| Pectinases | Efficiency in pectin degradation from grape juice | [ | ||
| Pulp and paper |
| Laccases | Improve the brightness and strength properties of the pulp | [ | |
|
| Laccases | Internal sizing of paper by use of laccase and hydrophobic compounds | [ | ||
| Xylanases | Eco-friendly of biobleaching of Kraft pulp of sugarcane straw | [ | |||
| Cellulases, xylanases, laccases, and lipases | Treatment enhances the brightness, deinking and reduces the heavy metals in the newspaper pulp | [ | |||
| Tannases | Detoxification of coffee pulp by reduction of caffeine and tannins | [ | |||
| Feruloyl esterases, Mn2+-oxidizing peroxidases, and laccases | Decrease the final lignin content of flax pulp and improvement of pulp brightness | [ | |||
| Textile | Cellulases | Textile waste hydrolysis for recovery of glucose and polyester | [ | ||
| Xylanases | Desizing, bioscouring, and biofinishing of cellulosic fabrics (textile) without adding any additives | [ | |||
|
| Amylases | Desizing of cotton fibers by removal of starch from the surface of textile fibers | [ | ||
|
| Pectinases | Bioscouring of cotton fibers | [ | ||
| Glucose oxidases and catalases | Removal of hydrogen peroxide from cotton bioprocessing | [ | |||
| Lignin peroxidases laccases and manganese peroxidases | Decolorization of the industrial textile effluent | [ | |||
| Environment | Biodegradation | Manganese-peroxidases and laccases | Biodegradation of chlorhexidine and octenidine as antimicrobial compounds used in oral careproducts | [ | |
| Laccases | Degrade lignin by oxidizing the phenolic and non-phenolic compounds to produce dimers, oligomers, and polymers | [ | |||
|
| Lipases, laccases, and peroxidases | Biodegradation of diesel oil hydrocarbons | [ | ||
| Bioremediation | Enzymatic reduction by the | The fungal enzyme could detoxify mercury (II) by extracellular sequestration via adsorption and precipitation | [ | ||
|
| Laccases | Bioremediation of pollutants such as bisphenol, diclofenac, and 17-a-ethinylestradiol in real samples from the AQUIRIS wastewater | [ | ||
| Extracellular enzymes | Fungal consortium used for removal of chromium and cadmium | [ | |||
|
| Laccases | Fugal laccase was immobilized on calcium and copper alginate/chitosan beads and used for the removal of 17 a-ethinylestradiol | [ | ||
|
| Chitinases | Biocontrol agent against larvae of | [ | ||
| Decolorization | Ligninolytic enzymes | Decolorization of Congo red, Poly R-478, and Methyl green | [ | ||
|
| Peroxidases and laccases | Decolorization of methyl orange, Congo red, trypan blue, and Eriochrome black T | [ | ||
|
| Laccases | High indigo dye decolorization | [ | ||
| Laccases | Decolorization of Congo red, aniline blue, and indigo carmine | [ | |||
|
| Manganese peroxidase | Decolorization of AO7 or CV pigment | [ | ||
| Biomedical | Antimicrobial | 32 different isolated fungi identified by morphological characteristics and internal transcribed spacer sequence analysis | Amylases, proteases, pectinases, xylanases, cellulases, chitinases, and lipases | Antimicrobial activity against pathogenic organisms by agar diffusion assays | [ |
| Proteases | Production of bioactive peptides from bovine and goat milk and the generated peptides tested against bacteria and fungi | [ | |||
|
| Chitinases | Degradation of chitosan to form chitosan-oligosaccharides and used as antimicrobial against pathogenic organisms | [ | ||
| Anticancer | Chitinases | Antitumor efficiency of chitinase against different types of cancer cell line | [ | ||
|
| Chitinases | Chitosan-oligosaccharides used as anticancer compounds, which inhibited the growth of cervical cancer cells at concentration of 4 mg/mL and significantly reduced the survival rate of the cells | [ | ||
|
| The synthesized zinc oxide conjugated | [ | |||
| Antioxidant |
| Catalases | Antioxidant system plays a crucial role in fungal development, aflatoxins biosynthesis, and virulence | [ | |
| Peroxidases and catalases | Production of enzymatic antioxidant from peels of banana, pomegranate, and orange | [ | |||
| Ligninases | During biodegradation of lignin, the fungi synthesize bioactive compounds such as mycophenolic acid, dicerandrol C, phenyl acetates, anthrax quinones, benzo furans, and alkenyl phenols that have antioxidant activities | [ |
Figure 1Schematic illustration for enzyme structure, activation, and steps of enzyme and substrate interaction.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of general application of fungal enzymes.
Figure 3Fungal enzyme applications for textiles. (A) Desizing agents such as amylases; (B) dyeing and dye diffusers such as proteases; (C) textile processing and bioscouring of cotton fibers such as pectinases; (D) biofinishing and biopolishing such as cellulases; and (E) biobleaching and enzymatic rinse process after reactive dyeing such as peroxidases.
Figure 4Schematic illustration represents the molecular mechanisms of the main antibacterial effects of fungal enzymes, including 1. alter membrane permeability and inhibition of glucose transport, 2. bacterial membrane damage and disruption, causing cytoplasm leakage, 3. inhibit bacterial enzymes, and 4. inhibit or alter cell division and the DNA replication process.
Figure 5Schematic illustration represents the mechanism of anticancer effect of the fungal enzymes, 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC), and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU).