Abstract

Pectin, a diverse carbohydrate polymer in plants consists of a core of α-1,4-linked D-galacturonic acid units, includes a vast portion of fruit and agricultural wastes. Using the wastes to produce beneficial compounds is a new approach to control the negative environmental impacts of the accumulated wastes. In the present study, we report a pectinase producing bacterium Streptomyces hydrogenans YAM1 and evaluate antioxidative and anticancer effects of the oligosaccharides obtained from pectin degradation. The production of oligosaccharides due to pectinase activity was detected by thin layer chromatography (TLC) and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Our results revealed that S. hydrogenans YAM1 can degrade pectin to unsaturated pectic oligo-galacturonic acids (POS) with approximately 93% radical scavenging activity in 20 mg/mL which it is more than 50% of the same concentration of pectin. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that MCF-7 cells viability decreased more than 32 and 92% following treatment with 6 and 20 mg/mL POS after 24 h, respectively. It is suggested that pectin degradation by S. hydrogenans YAM1 is not only a new approach to produce highly active compounds from fruit wastes, but also is an effective method to remove fibrous pollutants from different environments.

Highlights

  • Pectin, a diverse carbohydrate polymer in plants consists of a core of α-1,4-linked D-galacturonic acid units, includes a vast portion of fruit and agricultural wastes

  • The results demonstrated that pectic oligo-galacturonic acids (POS) have anticancer effects on MDA-MB-231 (Human breast cancer cells), and human prostatic carcinoma cell line (LNCaP and LNCaP C4-2 cells) without any toxic effects on noncancer ­cells[16]

  • Based on the BLAST analysis, it was submitted as Streptomyces hydrogenans YAM1 (MN255488) to NCBI

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Summary

Introduction

A diverse carbohydrate polymer in plants consists of a core of α-1,4-linked D-galacturonic acid units, includes a vast portion of fruit and agricultural wastes. It is suggested that pectin degradation by S. hydrogenans YAM1 is a new approach to produce highly active compounds from fruit wastes, and is an effective method to remove fibrous pollutants from different environments. The results demonstrated that POS have anticancer effects on MDA-MB-231 (Human breast cancer cells), and human prostatic carcinoma cell line (LNCaP and LNCaP C4-2 cells) without any toxic effects on noncancer ­cells[16]. This is the biggest competency of POS in comparison with other non-natural anti-cancer drugs

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