Abstract

An obligate halophilic Aspergillus gracilis which was isolated from a hypersaline man-made saltern from Thailand was screened for its potential of producing extracellular α-amylase in the previous studies. In this study the α-amylase was extracted and purified by the help of column chromatography using Sephadex G-100 column. Presence of amylase was verified by SDS-PAGE analysis, showing a single band of approximately 35 kDa. The specific activity of the enzyme was found to be 131.02 U/mg. The Lineweaver-Burk plot showed the V max and K m values of 8.36 U/mg and 6.33 mg/mL, respectively. The enzyme was found to have the best activity at 5 pH, 60°C, and 30% of NaCl concentration, showing its polyextremophilic nature. The use of various additives did not show much variation in the activity of enzyme, showing its resilience against inhibitors. The enzyme, when tested for its use for synthetic waste water remediation by comparing its activity with commercial amylase in different salt concentrations showed that the α-amylase from A. gracilis was having better performance at increasing salt concentrations than the commercial one. This shows its potential to be applied in saline waste water and other low water activity effluents for bioremediation.

Highlights

  • Extremophiles are able to reproduce and grow at extremes of pH, temperature, salinity, and so forth

  • The specific activity of the purified amylase from A. gracilis was found as 131.02 U/mg

  • The results show that increasing salinity increased the performance of amylase from A. gracilis Thailand Institute of Scientific and Technological Research (TISTR) 3638, while it decreased the performance of commercial amylase

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Summary

Introduction

Extremophiles are able to reproduce and grow at extremes of pH, temperature, salinity, and so forth. Halophiles are those extremophiles which are able to withstand extremes of salinity [1]. The ability of extremophiles to produce hydrolytic extremozymes has been much studied for its possible applications in industries [7, 8]. Halophilic hydrolases such as amylases, cellulases, lipases, xylanases, and proteases have been reported from halophilic bacteria [9]. Except for few preliminary studies there have not been many investigations on the extremozymes from halophilic fungi, obligate halophilic fungi [3, 10]

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