Abstract

BackgroundAmylases are used in various industrial processes and a key requirement for the efficiency of these processes is the use of enzymes with high catalytic activity at ambient temperature. Unfortunately, most amylases isolated from bacteria and filamentous fungi have optimal activity above 45 °C and low pH. For example, the most commonly used industrial glucoamylases, a type of amylase that degrades starch to glucose, are produced by Aspergillus strains displaying optimal activities at 45–60 °C. Thus, isolating new amylases with optimal activity at ambient temperature is essential for improving industrial processes. In this report, a glucoamylase secreted by the cold-adapted yeast Tetracladium sp. was isolated and biochemically characterized.ResultsThe effects of physicochemical parameters on enzyme activity were analyzed, and pH and temperature were found to be key factors modulating the glucoamylase activity. The optimal conditions for enzyme activity were 30 °C and pH 6.0, and the Km and kcat using soluble starch as substrate were 4.5 g/L and 45 min−1, respectively. Possible amylase or glucoamylase encoding genes were identified, and their transcript levels using glucose or soluble starch as the sole carbon source were analyzed. Transcription levels were highest in medium supplemented with soluble starch for the potential glucoamylase encoding gene. Comparison of the structural model of the identified Tetracladium sp. glucoamylase with the solved structure of the Hypocrea jecorina glucoamylase revealed unique structural features that may explain the thermal lability of the glucoamylase from Tetracladium sp.ConclusionThe glucoamylase secreted by Tetracladium sp. is a novel cold-adapted enzyme and its properties should render this enzyme suitable for use in industrial processes that require cold-active amylases, such as biofuel production.

Highlights

  • Amylases are used in various industrial processes and a key requirement for the efficiency of these processes is the use of enzymes with high catalytic activity at ambient temperature

  • Enzyme purification and characterization Tetracladium sp. extracellular protein samples were obtained by precipitation with ammonium sulfate at 80% saturation of cell-free supernatants of cultures grown using starch as the sole carbon source

  • According to the biochemical and molecular data presented the glucoamylase Amy1T produced by Tetracladium sp. is a novel cold-adapted amylase

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Summary

Introduction

Amylases are used in various industrial processes and a key requirement for the efficiency of these processes is the use of enzymes with high catalytic activity at ambient temperature. The most commonly used industrial glucoamylases, a type of amylase that degrades starch to glucose, are produced by Aspergillus strains displaying optimal activities at 45–60 °C. Isolating new amylases with optimal activity at ambient temperature is essential for improving industrial processes. A very well studied feature of cold-adapted yeasts is the presence of hydrolytic enzymes, which are secreted to aid the uptake of nutrients available in their surrounding environment. The glucoamylases used in industrial processes, mainly derived from Aspergillus strains, display the highest activity at temperatures between 45 and 60 °C [16]. The highest amylase activity was found in samples obtained from the yeast Tetracladium sp., and in preliminary characterizations the molecular weight of the enzyme was found to be ~80 kDa [20, 21]

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