Abstract

Sporotrichum thermophile Apinis, was the most active carboxymethyl-cellulose (CMC)-ase producer among seven thermophilic and four thermotolerant fungal species isolated from Egyptian soil and screened for their ability to produce extracellular cellulase in culture media containing CMC as a sole carbon source. The fungus also efficiently hydrolysed filter paper cellulose. Comparison of various untreated and alkali-treated cellulosic and lignocellulosic materials as substrates for cellulase production by S. thermophile revealed the most easily degraded substrate was sugarcane bagasse at 2% concentration. This substrate when alkali treated was the most susceptible to enzymic hydrolysis by culture filtrates of S. thermophile grown on untreated bagasse. Optimum hydrolysis was obtained after 18 h incubation with the filtrate at pH 3·5–4 and 45°C. Alkali treatment of bagasse reduced its lignin content significantly and the culture filtrate of S. thermophile grown on untreated bagasse was found to contain xylanase and polygalacturonase in addition to cellulase and cellobiase.

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