Life (Feb 2022)

Partial Purification and Characterization of Exo-Polygalacturonase Produced by <i>Penicillium oxalicum</i> AUMC 4153

  • Shamsan A. Almowallad,
  • Ghedeir M. Alshammari,
  • Muneer M. Alsayadi,
  • Naofel Aljafer,
  • Ekram A. Al-Sanea,
  • Mohammed Abdo Yahya,
  • Laila Naif Al-Harbi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12020284
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 284

Abstract

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Pectinase enzymes are important industrial enzymes having considerable applications in several industries, especially in food processing. Pectinases contribute 25% of global food enzyme sales. Therefore, the demand for a commercial enzyme with desirable characteristics and low production costs has become one of the great targets. Hence, this study aims to produce exo-polygalacturonase (exo-PG) using local fungal isolate Penicillium oxalicum AUMC 4153 by utilizing sugar beet manufacturing waste (sugar beet pulp) as a sole raw carbon source under shaken submerged fermentation, which is purified and characterized to optimize enzyme biochemical properties for industrial application. The purity of the obtained exo-PG was increased by about 28-fold, and the final enzyme yield was 57%. The partially purified enzyme was active at a broad range of temperatures (30–60 °C). The optimum temperature and pH for the purified exo-PG activity were 50 °C and pH 5. The enzyme was stable at a range of pH 3 to 6 and temperature 30–50 °C for 210 min. The values for Km and Vmax were 0.67 mg/mL, with polygalacturonic acid as substrate and 6.13 µmole galacturonic acid/min/mg protein, respectively. It can be concluded that purified exo-PG production by P. oxalicum grown on sugar beet waste is a promising effective method for useful applications.

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