Abstract

The microheterogeneous native amylolytic complex secreted by the isolate A6 of Lactobacillus plantarum revealed a selective enzyme specificity loss when submitted to a limited proteolysis under a suboptimum pH condition. A clear electrophoretic profile change toward just one shorter, more acidic, and equally active polypeptide fragment resulted from the pronase E pretreatment. Although the whole enzyme activity remained apparently unaffected for soluble starch, the native parallel activity on intact and non-gelatinized starch granules either from cereals or tubers was dramatically reduced. This phenomenon was more clearly documented by scanning electron microscopy using the easiest accessible native substrate: wheat starch granules. The anion-exchange-purified native enzymes from L. plantarum displayed a different optimum pH curve when compared with the thermotolerant alpha-amylase from Bacillus licheniformis. The alpha-amylases from the lactic-acid-producing A6 isolate presented an electrophoretic profile easily distinguishable from those from B. liqueniformis and B. subtilis species.

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