Abstract

Microbial enzymes such as protease and amylase are valuable enzymes with various applications, widely investigated for their applications in degradation of organic waste, biofuel industries, agricultural, pharmaceuticals, chemistry, and biotechnology. In particular, extremophiles play an important role in biorefinery due to their novel metabolic products such as high value catalytic enzymes that are active even under harsh environmental conditions. Due to their potentials and very broad activities, this study isolated, investigated, and characterized the protease- and amylase-producing bacterial strain FW2 that was isolated from food waste. Strain FW2 belongs to the genus Bacillus and was found to be closest to Bacillus amyloliquefaciens DSM 7T with a similarity of 99.86%. This strain was able to degrade organic compounds at temperatures from −6 °C to 75 °C (but weak at 80 °C) under a wide pH range (4.5–12) and high-salinity conditions up to 35% NaCl. Maximum enzyme production was obtained at 1200 ± 23.4 U/mL for protease and 2400 ± 45.8 U/mL for amylase for 4 days at pH 7–7.5, 40–45 °C, and 0–10% NaCl. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the molecular weights of purified protease were 28 kDa and 44 kDa, corresponding to alkaline protease (AprM) and neutral protease (NprM), respectively, and molecular weight of α-amylase was 55 kDa. Degradation food waste was determined after 15 days, observing a 69% of volume decrease. A potential commercial extremozyme-producing bacteria such as strain FW2 may be a promising contributor to waste degradation under extreme environmental conditions.

Highlights

  • Bacterial strain FW2 was isolated from kitchen food waste collected from the Jowon

  • FW2FW2 in this belonged to to the sequencewas wasdeposited deposited in the GenBank database belonged theBacillus genus

  • The related bacterial strains of strain FW2 grew within a limited temperature range of 15 to 45 ◦ C, at pH 5–10, and were unable degrade protein [37]

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous studies on extremophilic protease and amylase produced from extremophiles have been drastically increasing to aim at improving their ability to adapt to specific conditions [1,2]. It is not surprising that extremophiles have gained immense interest and have developed mechanisms to survive in severe conditions in terms of temperature, pH, pressure, and poor-nutrient conditions. Extremozymes isolated from extremophiles have become an alternative to chemical catalysts in a broad range of applications, including textiles, detergents, leather, pharmaceuticals, agricultural chemicals, and eco-friendly indicators for nature [3].

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