Several bacteria strains were choosen from pre-selected strains for further testing and characterisation. Hydrolytic activity of lipases from thermophilic bacteria was examined using olive oil as a substrate at different reaction temperatures. Alcoholytic activity was also investigated. Lipases from
Xylanases of thermophilic bacteria from Icelandic hot springs
✍ Scribed by M. Perttula; M. Rättö; M. Kondradsdottir; J. K. Kristjansson; L. Viikari
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 368 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1432-0614
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Thermophilic, aerobic bacteria isolated from Icelandic hot springs were screened for xylanase activity. Of 97 strains tested, 14 were found to be xylanase positive. Xylanase activities up to 12 nkat/ml were produced by these strains in shake flasks on xylan medium. The xylanases of the two strains producing the highest activities (ITI 36 and ITI 283) were similar with respect to temperature and p H optima (80°C and-pH 8.0). Xylanase production of strain ITI 36 was found to be induced by xylan and xylose. Xylanase activity of 24 nkat/ ml was obtained with this strain in a laboratory-scalefermentor cultivation on xylose medium, fl-Xylosidase activity was also detected in the culture filtrate. The thermal half-life of ITI 36 xylanase was 24 h at 70 ° C. The highest production of sugars from hydrolysis of beech xylan was obtained at 70 ° C, although xylan depolymerization was detected even up to 90 ° C.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Dark fermentative hydrogen production from glucose by a thermophilic culture (33HL), enriched from an Icelandic hot spring sediment sample, was studied in two continuous-flow, completely stirred tank reactors (CSTR1, CSTR2) and in one semi-continuous, anaerobic sequencing batch reactor (ASBR) at 588