Alpha amylase from bacillus pacificus associated with brown algae turbinaria ornata: Cultural conditions, purification, and biochemical characterization

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Abstract

We aimed in the current study, the identification of a marine bacterial amylase produced by Bacillus pacificus, which was associated with Turbinaria ornata. Cultural conditions were optimized for the highest amylase production on Tryptic soy broth media supplemented with starch 1% at initial pH 9, 55◦C for 24 h. The newly purified amylase was characterized for a possible biotechnological application. Data indicated that the obtained amylase with a molecular weight of 40 kD and the N-terminal sequence of the first 30 amino acids of amBp showed a high degree of homology with known alpha amylase, and was stable at 60◦C of pH 11. Among the tested substrate analogs, amBp was almost fully active on Alylose and Alylopectine (97%), but moderately hydrolyzed glycogen < sucrose < maltose < lactose. Therefore, the current amylase mainly generated maltohexaose from starch. Mg2+ and Zn2+ improved amylase activity up to 170%. While ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) similarly induced the greatest activity with purified amylase, PCMB had the least effect. Regarding all these characteristics, amylase from marine bacterial symbionts amBp has a new promising feature for probable therapeutic, industrial, and nutritional applications.

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Alonazi, M., Karray, A., Badjah-Hadj-ahmed, A. Y., & Bacha, A. B. (2021). Alpha amylase from bacillus pacificus associated with brown algae turbinaria ornata: Cultural conditions, purification, and biochemical characterization. Processes, 9(1), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr9010016

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