Iris Publishers - World Journal of Agriculture and Soil Science (WJASS)
Isolation, Identification and Characterization of Pectinase Producers from Agro Wastes (Citrus sinensis and Ananas comosus)
Authored by Ebuehi OAT
When
fruit is detached from the living plants it cannot repair its cells or defend
its tissues against natural deterioration. There are many reasons of fruit
destruction, but main cause of fruit spoilage is invasion by microorganisms
such as mould, yeast and bacteria. Fruits contain high levels of sugars and
nutrients and their low pH make fruits particularly desirable to fungal decay
[1]. During postharvest handling, mechanical damage causes the release of
enzymes present in the cell tissues. These enzymes break down the cellular
material. Pectinases are the first enzymes to be secreted by fungal pathogens
when they attack plant cell walls, weaken the plant cell wall and expose other
polymers to degradation by hemicellulases and cellulases [2]. Pectinases are
one of the most widely distributed enzymes in bacteria, fungi and plants
insects, nematodes, plants, and protozoan [3]. Fungi are considered to be
prospective enzyme producing sources.
Pectinases
breaks down pectin and are of significant importance in the current
biotechnological era with their all-embracing applications in fruit juice
extraction and its clarification, scouring of cotton, degumming of plant
fibers, waste water treatment, vegetable oil extraction, tea and coffee
fermentations, bleaching of paper, in poultry feed additives, in alcoholic
beverages and food industries [4]. Pectinases constitute approximately 10% of
the total enzyme production in the world market and 25% of global sale in the
food industry [5].
In the
fruit juice industry, they are used for clarification of fruit juice by
reduction in viscosity, increasing of juice yield by enzymatic liquefaction,
and maceration of pulps, enhancing pigmentation by extracting more anthocyanin
[6]. Microbial pectinases have been widely studied due to the requirement of
highly productive strains and the cost-effective production of enzymes. In the
present study, the pectinase was purified from a newly isolated Bacillus
subtilis strain and this enzyme was characterized Identification and
characterization of various pectinase producers have been published. There is
paucity of information from the literature on combined action of two fruits and
their mode of action. The aim of this study is to isolate and characterize
based on primary and secondary screening, pectinase producers and how to
optimize them from Agro-wastes, orange and pineapple
Materials
and Methods
Reagents
The
reagents and chemicals used in the study include: Pectin, K2HPO4, MgSO4.7H2O,
NaCl, CaCl2.2H2O, FeCl3.6H2 O, yeast extract, Agar, urea, (NH4)2SO4, MgSO4,
FeSO4, and glucose, were all of analytical grade and were purchased from Hi
Media and Sigma Chemicals, USA.
Materials
Collection
of samples
The
fresh oranges were plucked from a tree in Alagomeji, Lagos, Nigeria. The fresh
pineapples were gotten from a pineapple plantation in Epe, Lagos. The oranges
and pineapples which were intended to be rotten were purchased from Mushin
market, Lagos, Nigeria. The rottenness of the oranges and pineapples was
obtained by leaving the purchased fruits for 14 days on a flat surface in the
laboratory.
Isolation
of pectinolytic fungi
Fungi
were isolated from the rotten fruits (oranges and pineapples) by using the
modified pectin agar medium. In brief, two-fold dilutions of the spoiled
samples were plated in pectin agar medium and incubated at room temperature for
6 days. The strains grown in the plate were subcultured into pectin agar medium
separately and flooded with 1% cetrimide for primary screening. The
pectinolytic fungi produced a clearing zone when exposed to cetrimide [7].
Secondary
screening
The
fungal strains which showed clearing zones in pectin agar medium were selected
for secondary screening by estimating the polygalacturonase (PG) and pectin
lyase (PL) production under solid state fermentation by using the modified
medium [8].
Isolation
of pectinolytic bacteria
The
isolates of both the rotten and fresh pineapple were cultured and incubated at
35°C for 48 h. Thereafter, the distinct bacteria colonies were streaked on
nutrient agar and incubated at 35 °C for 24 h. When Gram-stained films were
examined, the isolates that appeared as Gram-positive rods was identified as
Bacillus subtilis based on result from biochemical test as enumerated [9-10].
The Bacillus isolates were maintained in nutrient agar slants at 4°C.
Enzyme
assays
Polygalacturonase
activity was measured according to the method described by [11-13] One unit of
enzyme activity has been defined as the amount of enzyme that releases one μ
mol of galacturonic acid /min under the assay conditions [12-13]. Pectin lyase
activity was measured by the reaction between unsaturated end products of
pectin degradation and thiobarbituric acid. One unit of activity is the amount
of enzyme causing a change in absorbance of 0.01 under the conditions of the
assay [14].
Effect
of inoculum age, inoculum size, and incubation time
Inoculum
age was optimized by inoculating the medium (secondary culture) with inocula
(primary culture) of varying age, namely 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24 h, and assaying
the filtered broth for enzyme activity. To study the effect of inoculum size,
(103-106CFU/ ml) inoculum was used to inoculate the production medium, and
polygalacturonase activity was assayed in the broth. The effect of incubation
time was studied by incubating the microorganism in production medium for
different time intervals (24, 48, 72 and 96 h) and measuring the enzyme
activity.
Effect
of temperature and pH
Most
favorable production temperature was studied by incubating the production
medium at different temperatures (20, 30, 35 and 40 °C). Polygalacturonase
activity was assayed by using the standard method [11]. For optimizing the
production of pH, the production medium varying pH, namely, 4.0, 4.5, 5.0, 5.5,
was used for enzyme production, and activity was measured.
Effect
of nitrogen source
The
effect of various nitrogen sources (Ca (NO3)2, (NH4)2SO4, (NH4)2NO3, NH4Cl,
NaNO3, KNO3, and Urea on the production of enzyme was studied by supplementing
0.1% w/v of these to the production media.
Effect
of D-galacturonic acid on polygalacturonase production
To
study the effect of D-galacturonic acid on polygalacturonase production, it was
added to the culture broth at a final concentration of 0.3, 0.6, 0.9, 1.2, and
1.5%w/v under aseptic conditions. The resulting extracellular polygalacturonase
activities produced were measured by estimating the reducing groups produced
(Figures 1-6).
Discussion
Pectinolytic
enzyme can be derived from different sources [15-17]. However, pectinase
producing microorganisms have due advantage over other sources because they can
be subjected to genetic and environmental manipulations to increase yield [18].
It has been reported that most Bacillus sp, enhances the production of
pectinase [19]. This result indicates that orange and pineapple contain
appreciable amount of pectin. The pectin was used as inducer for the production
of pectinolytic enzymes. In this study, pectinase production by Bacillus
subtilis and Aspergillus niger were compared. Our results show that both
Bacillus subtilis and Aspergillus niger were able to produce pectinase. The
isolates were later designated based on morphology as Bacillus subtilis, and
Aspergillus niger are among the most studied pectinolytic fungi (Sukumaran et
al., 2005; Favela-Torres et al., 2006). [20] also has reported that Bacillus
sp, has produced higher yield of pectinase compared to most other microbes such
as Aspergillus.
Temperature
is very important factor for microbial growth as well as microbial product
formation. The incubation temperature greatly affects the microbial growth
rate, enzyme secretion, enzyme inhibition, and protein denaturation. Thermal
stability and activity of pectinases are of great significance in
biotechnological process. In this study, it was reported that 30 °C was the
optimum incubation temperature for fresh and rotten orange and fresh pineapple
but 35 °C was observed as the optimum incubation temperature for rotten
pineapple. In previous report on A. niger, using orange and pineapple
D-galacturonic acid as carbon source exhibited maximum activity at 35 °C which
was in accordance to findings by [21].
The
initial pH of the fermentation medium plays a vital role in determining the
level of metabolite synthesis. The stability of the microbial metabolite is
also dependent on the hydrogen ion concentration of the medium [22]. In this
study it was found that the optimum pH condition for the production of
pectinase is pH 5 for fresh and rotten orange and pineapple respectively.
According to Spagna et al., 1996, maximum pectinase activity was under pH 5.
The optimum pH from this study is comparable to pectinase of Penicillium
varidictum and Penicillium oxalicum [23-25]. [26] reported that optimum pH 5.5
for pectinase activity from thermotolerant Aspergilus sp.
Maximum
pectinase activity was observed with 104 CFU/ml and 103 CFU/ml inoculums size
for both fresh and rotten oranges and pineapples respectively. The effect of
inoculum sizes for the production of pectinase fresh and rotten pineapple
respectively. Optimum inoculums density is an important consideration for
fermentation process since accumulation of spore can inhibit growth and
development of the culture organism [27].
An
adequate supply of carbon as energy source is critical for optimum growth of
organism and its metabolism. In the present study, supplementing carbon sources
increased pectinase production on solid state. According to [28] low enzyme
production with other carbon sources might be because of catabolite repression.
Glucose is known to repress the transcription of genes encoding enzymes
required for the utilization of alternative carbon sources; some of these genes
are also repressed by other sugars such as galactose, [29].The effect of
D-galacturonic acid with various concentrations (0.3%, 0.6%, 9%, 1.2%, 1.5%)
was evaluated in this study and it was observed that there were increase in the
pectinase activities with increase in the various concentrations of the
D-glucoronic acids as [29] found that pectin and polygalacturonic acid promoted
the production of pectic enzyme.
The
effect of nitrogen sources was also observed in this study for both rotten and
fresh oranges and pineapples. Of the various nitrogen sources used, maximum
pectinase activity was observed when medium was supplemented with NH4Cl for the
whole samples. Meanwhile, among the tested nitrogen sources, ammonium sulphate
(NH4SO4) and ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) increased the pectinase productivity on
SSF though their effect was not significant. The result is in agreement with
[30], who found that ammonium sulphate and ammonium nitrate were good nitrogen
sources for pectic enzyme production from A. niger. Moreover, Sarvamangala et
al., (2006) revealed that ammonium sulphate did influence production of
pectinase positively in solid-state conditions
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