Litcius/Paper detail

Industrially relevant pectinase production from <i>Aspergillus parvisclerotigenus</i> KX928754 using apple pomace as the promising substrate

Sonali Satapathy, Jyoti Prakash Soren, Keshab Chandra Mondal, Shweta Srivastava, Chinmay Pradhan, Santi Lata Sahoo, Hrudayanath Thatoi, Jyoti Ranjan Rout

2021Journal of Taibah University for Science28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The present study was focused on the potentiality of agro-based residues for the production of pectinase to meet the growing market demand by improving the yield with low cost of production. Among the agro-based residues used for the production of pectinase, apple pomace was able to produce the maximum of 1366.30 ± 36.71 U/ml using Aspergillus parvisclerotigenus KX928754 in liquid static surface fermentation, followed by sugarcane bagasse (973.12 ± 22.43 U/ml) and used tea (686.7 ± 45.06 U/ml). The process parameters optimization using a single variable at a time affirmed that pH 7.0, incubation period of 168 h, 30°C temperature, sucrose 2% as carbon source and peptone 3% as nitrogen source was found to be optimum for better production. The crude filtrate was purified by precipitation, dialyzed, eluted on Sephadex G-100 column followed by lyophilization and stored at −20°C. A. parvisclerotigenus KX928754 pectinase was purified to 2.10-fold, 2.91% of yield rate and having a specific activity of 1081.66 U/mg. Moreover, the electrophoretic analysis through sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) revealed 37.4 kDa of protein from the purified pectinase. Thus, the use of apple pomace as a substrate for scaling up pectinase with efficient recovery could reduce the price of the enzyme and increase its avenue for different industrial exploitation.

Topics & Concepts

PectinasePomaceChemistryChromatographyFermentationFood scienceBagasseSucroseBiochemistryBiotechnologyEnzymeBiologyPolysaccharides and Plant Cell WallsMicrobial Metabolites in Food BiotechnologyBiofuel production and bioconversion