Abstract

In order to improve the productivity of raw cassava starch-digestive glucoamylase of Rhizopus sp. MB46 in a liquid culture, a mutant strain, AF-1, which is resistant to 2-deoxyglucose, was derived. The mutant strain produced glucoamylase in the presence of 0.5% glucose though the parent strain did not. With a rice bran liquid medium the productivity was over 2-times that of the wild type strain. A rice bran liquid medium supplemented with β-cyclodextrin was also effective for glucoamylase production. Other maceration enzymes were also produced at a higher level with mutant strain AF-1 than with the wild type strain in a liquid culture as well as in a solid culture. The elution patterns of these enzymes on CM-cellulose column chromatography were principally the same with both strains except for glucoamylase. When 10% of raw cassava starch and cassava waste were digested with the culture filtrate of mutant strain AF-1, glucose was produced in 7% after 60-h incubation and 3.2% after 48-h incubation, respectively.

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