Abstract

Occurrence of α-N-acetylgalactosaminidases among 177 strains of marine bacteria of the phylum Bacteroidetes, epiphytes of marine algae growing on the littoral of the Seas of Okhotsk and Japan, was studied. About 36% of the isolates studied contained α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase. All of the bacteria of the genus Arenibacter (species A. latericius, A. certesii, and A. palladensis), irrespective of the source of isolation, synthesized this enzyme. The greatest number of α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase producers was found among the isolates from the algae Neosiphonia japonica, Acrosiphonia sonderi, and Ulva fenestrata sampled in the Cove of Trinity, Posyet Bay, the Sea of Japan. These were mainly bacteria of the genera Zobellia (50%) and Maribacter (58%). Among the epibionts studied, the bacteria Arenibacter latericius KMM 3523, an epiphyte of the brown alga Chorda filum from the Sea of Okhotsk, and Cellulophaga sp. KMM 6488, an epiphyte of the green alga Acrosiphonia sonderi from the Sea of Japan, were marked as the most promising sources of the enzyme. The results of this study showed that aerobic nonpathogenic marine Bacteroidetes, algal associants not requiring special cultivation conditions, are the promising, economical, and ecologically pure sources of unique and biotechnologically significant α-N-acetylgalactosaminidases.

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